Form Control
The Form Control component is a utility that lets you associate a form input with auxiliary components, such as labels, error indicators, or helper text.
Introduction
Form Control is a utility that wraps an input component with other associated components in order to make the state of the input available to those components.
For instance, you may want to show an additional element asking the user to enter a value if the input is empty, or display a warning icon if the entered value is incorrect.
Component
Usage
After installation, you can start building with this component using the following basic elements:
import FormControl from '@mui/base/FormControl';
export default function MyApp() {
return (
<FormControl>{/* <input> and/or other contents of the form */}</FormControl>
);
}
Basics
Form Control wraps around the elements of a form that need access to the state of an <input>
.
For instance, if the form's Submit button needs to change states after the user enters information, then the component will be structured like this:
<FormControl>
<input>
<button>Submit</button>
</FormControl>
The following demo shows how to create and style a form that uses Form Control to wrap the elements of the form.
Note that it also uses the useFormControlContext
hook in order to pass props to the custom Input—see the Hook section below for more details.
Name *
Usage with TypeScript
In TypeScript, you can specify the custom component type used in the slots.root
as a generic parameter of the unstyled component. This way, you can safely provide the custom root's props directly on the component:
<FormControl<typeof CustomComponent> slots={{ root: CustomComponent }} customProp />
The same applies for props specific to custom primitive elements:
<FormControl<'button'> slots={{ root: 'button' }} onClick={() => {}} />
Hook
import { useFormControlContext } from '@mui/base/FormControl';
The useFormControlContext
hook reads the context provided by Form Control.
This hook lets you work with custom input components inside of the Form Control.
You can also use it to read the form control's state and react to its changes in a custom component.
Hooks do not support slot props, but they do support customization props.
The demo below shows how to integrate this hook with its component counterpart:
CustomInput
is a wrapper around a native HTML<input>
that adds Form Control integration.ControlStateDisplay
reads the state of the form control and displays it as text.
empty | not focused
Note that even though Form Control supports both controlled and uncontrolled-style APIs (i.e. it accepts value
and defaultValue
props), useFormControlContext
returns only the controlled value
.
This way, you don't have to implement both in your custom input—Form Control does this for you.
Customization
Accessing the form control state
You can access the state of the form control by providing a function as a child of the Form Control. The state will be provided as a parameter to this function.
The following demo shows how to access the state of the form control in an Input component nested inside of the Form Control: