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The Complete Guide to Nested Forms in Phoenix

I recently spent some time dealing with nested forms in Phoenix. Nested forms are great when you want to create multiple database records in a single transaction and associate them with each other. I am new to Phoenix and really struggled to find any resources that helped me with my specific problem. I decided to document what I learned in the process in hopes of helping others that are new to Elixir and Phoenix.

Here is my attempt at a one stop shop to learn everything you will need to know about nested forms. If you would like to view the GitHub repo you can check it out here.

Thanks to Heartbeat and Jose for excellent blog posts on nested forms. Also shoutout to Josh for showing me some examples at RubyJax.

I want to make this guide as thorough as possible so the only assumption I am going to make is that you already have Phoenix and Elixir installed. If this is not the case pause now and follow this getting started guide.

With that taken care of lets go ahead and create a new application called nested_forms. To do this we are going to run mix phoenix.new nested_forms in our terminal and then cd nested_forms.

We can now start to scaffold out a basic application to work with. In your terminal run mix phoenix.gen.html User users name:string. This is going to generate a model and the corresponding view, templates, and controller.

User is the module name that we are creating, whereas users is going to be used as the name for our resources and schema.

This generator created everything we need except for the proper routes. To fix this we need to open web/router.ex and add resources "/users", UserController .

Your web/router.ex file should look like this. (… indicates truncated code)

defmodule NestedForms.Router do
  use NestedForms.Web, :router
  ...
  scope "/", NestedForms do
    pipe_through :browser # Use the default browser stack
    get "/", PageController, :index
    resources "/users", UserController
  end
  ...
end

For this example we are going to nest a Post inside of the User form. So we will have a User that has many Posts .

Nested forms are great when

So with that in mind lets scaffold out our Posts. In your terminal run mix phoenix.gen.model Post posts body:string user_id:references:users.

This should look very similar to what we did earlier with users but now we have added user_id:references:users to the end. This will ensure there is a relation between our models, making it so a User has many Posts and a Post belongs to a User. This automatically will add belongs_to :user, NestedForms.User in your post model and will create a user_idforeign key in your Post schema.

There is one final step we have to take to finish this relation and that is to add has_many :posts, NestedForms.Post to the User model. Open up web/models/user.ex and change it to look like below.

defmodule NestedForms.User do
  use NestedForms.Web, :model

  schema "users" do
    field :name, :string
    has_many :posts, NestedForms.Post

    timestamps()
  end
  ...
end

Now that we have our models setup lets get our database up and running. First we will create the database with mix ecto.create then we will run the migrations with mix ecto.migrate.

If you are new to Phoenix and are confused by the code that was generated I highly recommend getting Programming Phoenix by Chris McCord. He does a great job walking you through how to build a simple Phoenix application without using generators.

Now is a good time to fire up the server and check out what the generators have built for us so far. Run mix phoenix.server in your terminal and navigate to http://localhost:4000/users.

(Wow, doesn’t that look pretty! Phoenix comes preloaded with Bootstrap and so all of the generated code looks pretty nice straight out of the box.)

You will see that we can click New User and we are taken to a form that allows us to create a new User. The is great, but we want to be able to create a new User and a Post at the same time from within the same form.

[image:5EDCB6C2-D3E6-4C3A-A51B-FEE75E4BA6CB-41694-0001910F151E43B6/Screen Shot 2017-01-23 at 2.53.09 PM.png]

In order to do this we have to make a few changes to our form and controller.

First go to web/templates/user/_form.html.eex. We are going to use inputs_for to build out our nested form. inputs_for allows us to attach nested data to the form. (If you are coming from a Rails background this should look similar to fields_for and accepts_nested_attributes_for.)

Add the following to the your form.

  <%= inputs_for f, :posts, fn p -> %>
    <div class="form-group">
      <%= label p, :body, class: "control-label" %>
      <%= text_input p, :body, class: "form-control" %>
      <%= error_tag p, :body %>
    </div>
  <% end %>

Now your form should look like this:

...

  <div class="form-group">
    <%= label f, :name, class: "control-label" %>
    <%= text_input f, :name, class: "form-control" %>
    <%= error_tag f, :name %>
  </div>

  <%= inputs_for f, :posts, fn p -> %>
    <div class="form-group">
      <%= label p, :body, class: "control-label" %>
      <%= text_input p, :body, class: "form-control" %>
      <%= error_tag p, :body %>
    </div>
  <% end %>

  <div class="form-group">
    <%= submit "Submit", class: "btn btn-primary" %>
  </div>
<% end %>

Let’s head back to http://localhost:4000/users and try to create a new User. We can see that even though we updated our form we still do not get an option to create a post.

You may be thinking, “But why Mike? I just did all this work updating my form, shouldn’t it show up”. Well I had similar thoughts when I was trying to get this work. If you take a closer look at the form you can see that it accepts a changeset as an argument. So lets take a look at that changeset we are passing in and see what adjustments we need to make.

If we take a look at our new action in our UserController we can see where the changeset is coming from. We need to update this changeset so it includes an empty Post by default.

Your new action should now look like this:

  def new(conn, _params) do
    changeset = User.changeset(%User{posts: [
        %NestedForms.Post{}
      ]})
    render(conn, "new.html", changeset: changeset)
  end

Now if we head back over to our form we should finally see what we are looking for,

[image:FD6861E2-84C9-465A-B7B8-0ECC234B9114-41694-000190F37420561A/Screen Shot 2017-01-23 at 3.16.59 PM.png]

Congrats! We are getting closer. Go ahead and try to create a new User with a Post just to see what happens.

If you have everything set up properly you should be redirected to the index page and you should see the User you just created.

So far so good, right? Well not exactly there are still a number of issues we need to iron out. Lets take a deeper look and see exactly how our User and Post were saved. I grabbed these screenshots from Postico . We can see that when we check out the User data we attempted to persist everything looks great. [image:67D470B8-0136-4E48-A000-62FA4A0D1C71-41694-000190F374A1A8EE/Screen Shot 2017-01-23 at 3.20.03 PM.png]

The problem is when we look for the Post data, we can see that it was not saved to the database. [image:66E96E7B-CAA6-40B6-930B-6115B1D57A8D-41694-000190F375048545/Screen Shot 2017-01-23 at 3.20.26 PM.png]

This threw me off for a while but I eventually tracked down the issue. The problem is we never informed the User changeset that it was supposed to cast any nested associations from the params structure.

There is any easy way to fix this using cast_assoc function in Ecto. Head on over to web/models/user.ex and add |> cast_assoc(:posts, required: true) to your changeset.

Note: If you want to use cast_assoc you need to make sure that the association is already preloaded in the changeset struct. We have already taken care of this above so we will be fine.

Your changeset should now look like this:

defmodule NestedForms.User do
  use NestedForms.Web, :model

   ... 
  def changeset(struct, params \\ %{}) do
    struct
    |> cast(params, [:name])
    |> cast_assoc(:posts, required: true)
    |> validate_required([:name])
  end
end

I found this little blurb from Jose Valim that did a great job explaining what cast_assoc is doing:

Note we are using cast_assoc instead of put_assoc in this example. Both functions are defined in Ecto.Changeset. cast_assoc (or cast_embed) is used when you want to manage associations or embeds based on external parameters, such as the data received through Phoenix forms. In such cases, Ecto will compare the data existing in the struct with the data sent through the form and generate the proper operations. On the other hand, we use put_assoc (or put_embed) when we already have the associations (or embeds) as structs and changesets, and we simply want to tell Ecto to take those entries as is.

Now if we take a look back at Postico we can see we are getting the results we were looking for.

[image:AEFAAD9E-C8A7-4E59-8EF3-75B6CE7298A3-41694-000190F3754BCBBC/Screen Shot 2017-01-23 at 3.45.41 PM.png]

In addition to allowing the post to persist cast_assoc also sets the user_id to establish the relation between the User and Post.

Ok, now things are really looking great, we are able to create a User and a Post from the same form. Now go ahead and try to edit the User you just created.

You can see we are welcomed with this nice error message. [image:547F0493-C282-4A36-BF28-0EF79E3E303C-41694-000190F375E463BA/Screen Shot 2017-01-23 at 3.16.11 PM.png]

Thats no biggie, lets take a look at what is happening here. The error explains to us the we need to preload our association. Ecto does not automatically preload associations for you so you need to explicitly tell it when you want this to happen. Here is a great blog post that goes over nested preloads.

So lets head back on over to our UserController and make the following change to our edit action.

  def edit(conn, %{"id" => id}) do
    user = Repo.get!(User, id) |> Repo.preload(:posts)
    changeset = User.changeset(user)
    render(conn, "edit.html", user: user, changeset: changeset)
  end

By piping our user through to Repo.preload(:posts) we are letting Ecto know that we would like to preload the associated Posts. We also need to make a similar adjustment to our update action.

Change your update action to look like this.

def update(conn, %{"id" => id, "user" => user_params}) do
    user = Repo.get!(User, id) |> Repo.preload(:posts)
   ...
  end

Now save those changes and head back try to edit your User again. If you a change and click save you can see that everything is working just like we planned.

At this point I was pretty happy with what I had set up but there were still a few things I needed to sort out. First, how could I delete certain Posts without deleting the entire User. I also needed to figure out how I could dynamically add additional Posts from the form.

First lets looks into deleting individual Posts. Open up your Posts model and we are going to add a delete field to our schema.

Your Posts model should now look like this

defmodule NestedForms.Post do
  use NestedForms.Web, :model

  schema "posts" do
    field :body, :string
    field :delete, :boolean, virtual: true
    belongs_to :user, NestedForms.User

    timestamps()
  end

  @doc """
  Builds a changeset based on the `struct` and `params`.
  """
  def changeset(struct, params \\ %{}) do
    struct
    |> cast(params, [:body], [:delete])
    |> set_delete_action
    |> validate_required([:body])
  end

  defp set_delete_action(changeset) do
    if get_change(changeset, :delete) do
      %{changeset | action: :delete}
    else
      changeset
    end
  end
end

Lets go over the changes we made here to the Post model.

First we added a delete field to our post schema. By passing the option virtual: true to the field we are telling Phoenix that we do not want to persist this field to the database. Virtual fields exist temporarily in the schema and are very helpful for local processes and validations.

Now we need to pass :delete as a required parameter to cast

The next step is to create the function set_delete_action. This function takes a changeset as an argument and only runs if the :delete key is present in the changeset. In order to check if the :delete key is present in the changeset we are using get_change.

get_change returns the value of the key you passed in if that key is present and nil if it is not presesnt.

If we have marked a Post to be deleted then we will merge in action: delete into the Post changeset which will inform Phoenix to delete that post.

Now all we have to do is add the delete field to our form. Go ahead and open up web/templates/user/_form.html.eex and make the following changes.

...
  <%= inputs_for f, :posts, fn p -> %>
    <div class="form-group">
      <%= label p, :body, class: "control-label" %>
      <%= text_input p, :body, class: "form-control" %>
      <%= error_tag p, :body %>
    </div>

    <div class="form-group">
      <%= label p, :delete, "Delete?", class: "control-label" %>
      <%= checkbox p, :delete %>
    </div>
  <% end %>
...
<% end %>

Now if we refresh the edit page for our User we can see that we have the option to delete a Post.

[image:20146CC0-D81F-41F0-A7C8-BE573F62B010-9355-000010D9BD334DC8/Screen Shot 2017-01-24 at 8.45.25 PM.png]

Now for the tricky part, how do we dynamically add Posts to the form? Big thanks to schmitty for an excellent video tutorial on this.

Open up web/templates/user/_form.html.eex and add <%= link_to_post_fields %> to your form.

Your form should now look like this:

...
    <div class="form-group">
      <%= label p, :delete, "Delete?", class: "control-label" %>
      <%= checkbox p, :delete %>
    </div>
  <% end %>
  
  <%= link_to_post_fields %>

  <div class="form-group">
    <%= submit "Submit", class: "btn btn-primary" %>
  </div>
...

The link_to_post_fields does not yet exist so we need to head on over to web/views/user_view.ex and create it.

This is what your UserView should look like.

defmodule NestedForms.UserView do
  use NestedForms.Web, :view
  alias NestedForms.User
  alias NestedForms.Post

  def link_to_post_fields do
    changeset = User.changeset(%User{posts: [%Post{}]})
    form = Phoenix.HTML.FormData.to_form(changeset, [])
    fields = render_to_string(__MODULE__, "post_fields.html", f: form)
    link "Add Post", to: "#", "data-template": fields, id: "add_post"
  end
end

Lets walk through the code in our UserView

First we are going to alias User and Post to make them easier to work with. Our next step is to create an empty User changeset with an empty Post nested inside. You may notice this is the exact same way we created the changeset in our new action.

Now we need to create our form data. We are going to use the Phoenix.HTML.FormData protocol to convert a data structure into a Phoenix.HTML.Form struct using the to_form function.

Now we are going to use this form to generate our fields that we will use as a template. render_to_string is going to take the module (__MODULE__ is a macro that returns the current module name as an atom), the template, and allow us to assign our form to f.

Finally we need to return the actual link we want to create. We can pass the template we just created in as a data attribute to that link.

Now that we have our UserView , lets create our template. Create a new file called web/templates/user/post_fields.html.eex

It should look like this:

<%= inputs_for @f, :posts, fn p -> %>
  <div id="new-post">
    <div class="form-group">
      <%= label p, :body, class: "control-label" %>
      <%= text_input p, :body, class: "form-control" %>
      <%= error_tag p, :body %>
    </div>
  </div>
<% end %>

After we have that set up we can go and inspect that link to get a better understanding of what is happening.

[image:5FCADC10-F3AF-4AD3-8C3B-08043A1622E9-9355-000024FB56454FB2/Screen Shot 2017-01-25 at 12.59.12 PM.png]

You can see that we have the data-template with all of the fields automatically generated from the form data. Our next step is to get the link to actually insert this into our DOM.

Now head on over to app.js and we are going to add a little javascript to get everything working.

Add this to your web/static/js/app.js

var el = document.getElementById('add_post');
el.onclick = function(e){
  e.preventDefault()
  var el = document.getElementById('add_post');
  let time = new Date().getTime()
  let template = el.getAttribute('data-template')
  var uniq_template = template.replace(/\[0]/g, `[${time}]`)
  uniq_template = uniq_template.replace(/\[0]/g, `_${time}_`)
  this.insertAdjacentHTML('afterend', uniq_template)

  };

Now with that little bit of javascript we should be all set! You can now add as many posts as you would like for each User. [image:938A414D-6FCD-48A9-965B-AC456BA4535C-9355-00002A60A3B683BD/Screen Shot 2017-01-25 at 2.56.47 PM.png]

I hope you found this post helpful, if you have any questions please leave a comment below.

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