ExpressionEngine Docs

Form Helper

The Form Helper file contains functions that assist in working with forms. This helper is loaded using the following code:

ee()->load->helper('form');

Available Functions

form_open([$action = ''[, $attributes = ''[, $hidden = array()]]])

Parameter Type Description
$action String Form action/target URI string
$attributes Array HTML attributes
$hidden Array An array of hidden fields’ definitions
Returns String An HTML form opening tag

Creates an opening form tag with a base URL built from your config preferences. It will optionally let you add form attributes and hidden input fields, and will always add the accept-charset attribute based on the charset value in your config file.

The main benefit of using this tag rather than hard coding your own HTML is that it permits your site to be more portable in the event your URLs ever change.

Here’s a simple example:

echo form_open('email/send');

The above example would create a form that points to your base URL plus the “email/send” URI segments, like this:

<form method="post" accept-charset="utf-8" action="https://example.com/email/send">

Adding Attributes

Attributes can be added by passing an associative array to the second parameter, like this:

 $attributes = array('class' => 'email', 'id' => 'myform');
 echo form_open('email/send', $attributes);

Alternatively, you can specify the second parameter as a string:

 echo form_open('email/send', 'class="email" id="myform"');

The above examples would create a form similar to this:

 <form method="post" accept-charset="utf-8" action="https://example.com/email/send" class="email" id="myform">

Adding Hidden Input Fields

Hidden fields can be added by passing an associative array to the third parameter, like this:

 $hidden = array('username' => 'Joe', 'member_id' => '234');
 echo form_open('email/send', '', $hidden);

You can skip the second parameter by passing any falsy value to it.

The above example would create a form similar to this:

 <form method="post" accept-charset="utf-8" action="https://example.com/email/send">
     <input type="hidden" name="username" value="Joe" />
     <input type="hidden" name="member_id" value="234" />

form_open_multipart([$action = ''[, $attributes = array()[, $hidden = array()]])

Parameter Type Description
$action String Form action/target URI string
$attributes Array HTML attributes
$hidden Array An array of hidden fields’ definitions
Returns String An HTML multipart form opening tag

This function is absolutely identical to form_open() above, except that it adds a multipart attribute, which is necessary if you would like to use the form to upload files with.

form_hidden($name[, $value = ''])

Parameter Type Description
$name String Field name
$value String Field value
Returns String An HTML hidden input field tag

Lets you generate hidden input fields. You can either submit a name/value string to create one field:

form_hidden('username', 'johndoe');
// Would produce: <input type="hidden" name="username" value="johndoe" />

… or you can submit an associative array to create multiple fields:

$data = array(
    'name'  => 'John Doe',
    'email' => '[email protected]',
    'url'   => 'https://example.com'
);

echo form_hidden($data);

/*
    Would produce:
    <input type="hidden" name="name" value="John Doe" />
    <input type="hidden" name="email" value="john@example.com" />
    <input type="hidden" name="url" value="https://example.com" />
*/

You can also pass an associative array to the value field:

$data = array(
    'name'  => 'John Doe',
    'email' => '[email protected]',
    'url'   => 'https://example.com'
);

echo form_hidden('my_array', $data);

/*
    Would produce:

    <input type="hidden" name="my_array[name]" value="John Doe" />
    <input type="hidden" name="my_array[email]" value="john@example.com" />
    <input type="hidden" name="my_array[url]" value="https://example.com" />
*/

If you want to create hidden input fields with extra attributes:

$data = array(
    'type'  => 'hidden',
    'name'  => 'email',
    'id'    => 'hiddenemail',
    'value' => '[email protected]',
    'class' => 'hiddenemail'
);

echo form_input($data);

/*
    Would produce:

    <input type="hidden" name="email" value="john@example.com" id="hiddenemail" class="hiddenemail" />
*/

form_input([$data = ''[, $value = ''[, $extra = '']])

Parameter Type Description
$data Array Field attributes data
$value String Field value
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML text input field tag

Lets you generate a standard text input field. You can minimally pass the field name and value in the first and second parameter:

echo form_input('username', 'johndoe');

Or you can pass an associative array containing any data you wish your form to contain:

$data = array(
    'name'      => 'username',
    'id'        => 'username',
    'value'     => 'johndoe',
    'maxlength' => '100',
    'size'      => '50',
    'style'     => 'width:50%'
);

echo form_input($data);

/*
    Would produce:

    <input type="text" name="username" value="johndoe" id="username" maxlength="100" size="50" style="width:50%"  />
*/

If you would like your form to contain some additional data, like JavaScript, you can pass it as a string in the third parameter:

$js = 'onClick="some_function()"';
echo form_input('username', 'johndoe', $js);

form_password([$data = ''[, $value = ''[, $extra = '']]])

Parameter Type Description
$data Array Field attributes data
$value String Field value
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML password input field tag

This function is identical in all respects to the form_input() function above except that it uses the “password” input type.

form_upload([$data = ''[, $value = ''[, $extra = '']]])

Parameter Type Description
$data Array Field attributes data
$value String Field value
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML file upload input field tag

This function is identical in all respects to the form_input() function above except that it uses the “file” input type, allowing it to be used to upload files.

form_textarea([$data = ''[, $value = ''[, $extra = '']]])

Parameter Type Description
$data Array Field attributes data
$value String Field value
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML textarea tag

This function is identical in all respects to the form_input() function above except that it generates a “textarea” type.

Note: Instead of the maxlength and size attributes in the above example, you will instead specify rows and cols.

form_dropdown([$name = ''[, $options = array()[, $selected = array()[, $extra = '']]]])

Parameter Type Description
$name String Field name
$options Array An associative array of options to be listed
$selected Array List of fields to mark with the selected attribute
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML dropdown select field tag

Lets you create a standard drop-down field. The first parameter will contain the name of the field, the second parameter will contain an associative array of options, and the third parameter will contain the value you wish to be selected. You can also pass an array of multiple items through the third parameter, and CodeIgniter will create a multiple select for you.

Example:

$options = array(
    'small'     => 'Small Shirt',
    'med'       => 'Medium Shirt',
    'large'     => 'Large Shirt',
    'xlarge'    => 'Extra Large Shirt',
);

$shirts_on_sale = array('small', 'large');
echo form_dropdown('shirts', $options, 'large');

/*
    Would produce:

    <select name="shirts">
        <option value="small">Small Shirt</option>
        <option value="med">Medium  Shirt</option>
        <option value="large" selected="selected">Large Shirt</option>
        <option value="xlarge">Extra Large Shirt</option>
    </select>
*/

echo form_dropdown('shirts', $options, $shirts_on_sale);

/*
    Would produce:

    <select name="shirts" multiple="multiple">
        <option value="small" selected="selected">Small Shirt</option>
        <option value="med">Medium  Shirt</option>
        <option value="large" selected="selected">Large Shirt</option>
        <option value="xlarge">Extra Large Shirt</option>
    </select>
*/

If you would like the opening <select> to contain additional data, like an id attribute or JavaScript, you can pass it as a string in the fourth parameter:

$js = 'id="shirts" onChange="some_function();"';
echo form_dropdown('shirts', $options, 'large', $js);

If the array passed as $options is a multidimensional array, then form_dropdown() will produce an <optgroup> with the array key as the label.

form_multiselect([$name = ''[, $options = array()[, $selected = array()[, $extra = '']]]])

Parameter Type Description
$name String Field name
$options Array An associative array of options to be listed
$selected Array List of fields to mark with the selected attribute
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML dropdown multiselect field tag

Lets you create a standard multiselect field. The first parameter will contain the name of the field, the second parameter will contain an associative array of options, and the third parameter will contain the value or values you wish to be selected.

The parameter usage is identical to using form_dropdown() above, except of course that the name of the field will need to use POST array syntax, e.g. foo[].

form_fieldset([$legend_text = ''[, $attributes = array()]])

Parameter Type Description
$legend_text String Text to put in the <legend> tag
$attributes Array Attributes to be set on the <fieldset> tag
Returns String An HTML fieldset opening tag

Lets you generate fieldset/legend fields.

Example:

echo form_fieldset('Address Information');
echo "<p>fieldset content here</p>\n";
echo form_fieldset_close();

/*
    Produces:

        <fieldset>
            <legend>Address Information</legend>
                <p>form content here</p>
        </fieldset>
*/

Similar to other functions, you can submit an associative array in the second parameter if you prefer to set additional attributes:

$attributes = array(
    'id'    => 'address_info',
    'class' => 'address_info'
);

echo form_fieldset('Address Information', $attributes);
echo "<p>fieldset content here</p>\n";
echo form_fieldset_close();

/*
    Produces:

    <fieldset id="address_info" class="address_info">
        <legend>Address Information</legend>
        <p>form content here</p>
    </fieldset>
*/

form_fieldset_close([$extra = ''])

Parameter Type Description
$extra String Anything to append after the closing tag, as is
Returns String An HTML fieldset closing tag

Produces a closing </fieldset> tag. The only advantage to using this function is it permits you to pass data to it which will be added below the tag. For example:

$string = '</div></div>';
echo form_fieldset_close($string);
// Would produce: </fieldset></div></div>

form_checkbox([$data = ''[, $value = ''[, $checked = FALSE[, $extra = '']]]])

Parameter Type Description
$data Array Field attributes data
$value String Field value
$checked Bool Whether to mark the checkbox as being checked
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML checkbox input tag

Lets you generate a checkbox field. Simple example:

echo form_checkbox('newsletter', 'accept', TRUE);
// Would produce:  <input type="checkbox" name="newsletter" value="accept" checked="checked" />

The third parameter contains a boolean TRUE/FALSE to determine whether the box should be checked or not.

Similar to the other form functions in this helper, you can also pass an array of attributes to the function:

$data = array(
    'name'      => 'newsletter',
    'id'        => 'newsletter',
    'value'     => 'accept',
    'checked'   => TRUE,
    'style'     => 'margin:10px'
);

echo form_checkbox($data);
// Would produce: <input type="checkbox" name="newsletter" id="newsletter" value="accept" checked="checked" style="margin:10px" />

Also as with other functions, if you would like the tag to contain additional data like JavaScript, you can pass it as a string in the fourth parameter:

$js = 'onClick="some_function()"';
echo form_checkbox('newsletter', 'accept', TRUE, $js)

form_radio([$data = ''[, $value = ''[, $checked = FALSE[, $extra = '']]]])

Parameter Type Description
$data Array Field attributes data
$value String Field value
$checked Bool Whether to mark the radio button as being checked
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML radio input tag

This function is identical in all respects to the form_checkbox() function above except that it uses the “radio” input type.

form_label([$label_text = ''[, $id = ''[, $attributes = array()]]])

Parameter Type Description
$label_text String Text to put in the <label> tag
$id String ID of the form element that we’re making a label for
$attributes String HTML attributes
Returns String An HTML field label tag

Lets you generate a <label>. Simple example:

echo form_label('What is your Name', 'username');
// Would produce:  <label for="username">What is your Name</label>

Similar to other functions, you can submit an associative array in the third parameter if you prefer to set additional attributes.

Example:

$attributes = array(
    'class' => 'mycustomclass',
    'style' => 'color: #000;'
);

echo form_label('What is your Name', 'username', $attributes);
// Would produce:  <label for="username" class="mycustomclass" style="color: #000;">What is your Name</label>

form_submit([$data = ''[, $value = ''[, $extra = '']]])

Parameter Type Description
$data String Button name
$value String Button value
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML input submit tag

Lets you generate a standard submit button. Simple example:

echo form_submit('mysubmit', 'Submit Post!');
// Would produce:  <input type="submit" name="mysubmit" value="Submit Post!" />

Similar to other functions, you can submit an associative array in the first parameter if you prefer to set your own attributes. The third parameter lets you add extra data to your form, like JavaScript.

form_reset([$data = ''[, $value = ''[, $extra = '']]])

Parameter Type Description
$data String Button name
$value String Button value
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML input reset button tag

Lets you generate a standard reset button. Use is identical to form_submit().

form_button([$data = ''[, $content = ''[, $extra = '']]])

Parameter Type Description
$data String Button name
$content String Button label
$extra String Extra attributes to be added to the tag as is
Returns String An HTML button tag

Lets you generate a standard button element. You can minimally pass the button name and content in the first and second parameter:

echo form_button('name','content');
// Would produce: <button name="name" type="button">Content</button>

Or you can pass an associative array containing any data you wish your form to contain:

$data = array(
    'name'      => 'button',
    'id'        => 'button',
    'value'     => 'true',
    'type'      => 'reset',
    'content'   => 'Reset'
);

echo form_button($data);
// Would produce: <button name="button" id="button" value="true" type="reset">Reset</button>

If you would like your form to contain some additional data, like JavaScript, you can pass it as a string in the third parameter:

$js = 'onClick="some_function()"';
echo form_button('mybutton', 'Click Me', $js);

form_close([$extra = ''])

Parameter Type Description
$extra String Anything to append after the closing tag, as is
Returns String An HTML form closing tag

Produces a closing </form> tag. The only advantage to using this function is it permits you to pass data to it which will be added below the tag. For example:

$string = '</div></div>';
echo form_close($string);
// Would produce:  </form> </div></div>

form_prep([$str = ''[, $is_textarea = FALSE]])

Parameter Type Description
$str String Value to escape
$is_textarea Bool Whether we’re preparing for <textarea> or a regular input tag
Returns String Escaped value

Allows you to safely use HTML and characters such as quotes within form elements without breaking out of the form.

Consider this example:

$string = 'Here is a string containing "quoted" text.';
<input type="text" name="myform" value="$string" />

Since the above string contains a set of quotes it will cause the form to break. The form_prep() function converts HTML so that it can be used safely:

<input type="text" name="myform" value="<?php echo form_prep($string); ?>" />

Note: If you use any of the form helper functions listed in this page the form values will be prepped automatically, so there is no need to call this function. Use it only if you are creating your own form elements.

set_value([$field = ''[, $default = ''[, $is_textarea = FALSE]]])

Parameter Type Description
$field String Field name
$default String Default value
$is_textarea Bool Whether we’re setting <textarea> content
Returns String Field value

Permits you to set the value of an input form or textarea. You must supply the field name via the first parameter of the function. The second (optional) parameter allows you to set a default value for the form.

Example:

<input type="text" name="quantity" value="<?=set_value('quantity', '0');?>" size="50" />

The above form will show “0” when loaded for the first time.

set_select([$field = ''[, $value = ''[, $default = FALSE]]])

Parameter Type Description
$field String Field name
$value String Value to check for
$default String Whether the value is also a default one
Returns String ‘selected’ attribute or an empty string

If you use a <select> menu, this function permits you to display the menu item that was selected.

The first parameter must contain the name of the select menu, the second parameter must contain the value of each item, and the third (optional) parameter lets you set an item as the default (use boolean TRUE/FALSE).

Example:

<select name="myselect">
    <option value="one" <?php echo  set_select('myselect', 'one', TRUE); ?> >One</option>
    <option value="two" <?php echo  set_select('myselect', 'two'); ?> >Two</option>
    <option value="three" <?php echo  set_select('myselect', 'three'); ?> >Three</option>
</select>

set_checkbox([$field = ''[, $value = ''[, $default = FALSE]]])

Parameter Type Description
$field String Field name
$value String Value to check for
$default String Whether the value is also a default one
Returns String ‘checked’ attribute or an empty string

Permits you to display a checkbox in the state it was submitted.

The first parameter must contain the name of the checkbox, the second parameter must contain its value, and the third (optional) parameter lets you set an item as the default (use boolean TRUE/FALSE).

Example:

<input type="checkbox" name="mycheck" value="1" <?php echo set_checkbox('mycheck', '1'); ?> />
<input type="checkbox" name="mycheck" value="2" <?php echo set_checkbox('mycheck', '2'); ?> />

set_radio([$field = ''[, $value = ''[, $default = FALSE]]])

Parameter Type Description
$field String Field name
$value String Value to check for
$default String Whether the value is also a default one
Returns String ‘checked’ attribute or an empty string

Permits you to display radio buttons in the state they were submitted. This function is identical to the set_checkbox() function above.

Example:

<input type="radio" name="myradio" value="1" <?php echo  set_radio('myradio', '1', TRUE); ?> />
<input type="radio" name="myradio" value="2" <?php echo  set_radio('myradio', '2'); ?> />

Note: If you are using the Form Validation class, you must always specify a rule for your field, even if empty, in order for the set_*() functions to work. This is because if a Form Validation object is defined, the control for set_*() is handed over to a method of the class instead of the generic helper function.

form_error([$field = ''[, $prefix = ''[, $suffix = '']]])

Parameter Type Description
$field String Field name
$prefix String Error opening tag
$suffix String Error closing tag
Returns String HTML-formatted form validation error message(s)

Returns a validation error message from the Form Validation Library, associated with the specified field name. You can optionally specify opening and closing tag(s) to put around the error message.

Example:

// Assuming that the 'username' field value was incorrect:
echo form_error('myfield', '<div class="error">', '</div>');

// Would produce: <div class="error">Error message associated with the "username" field.</div>

validation_errors([$prefix = ''[, $suffix = '']])

Parameter Type Description
$prefix String Error opening tag
$suffix String Error closing tag
Returns String HTML-formatted form validation error message(s)

Similarly to the form_error() function, returns all validation error messages produced by the ../libraries/form_validation, with optional opening and closing tags around each of the messages.

Example:

echo validation_errors('<span class="error">', '</span>');

/*
    Would produce, e.g.:

    <span class="error">The "email" field doesn't contain a valid e-mail address!</span>
    <span class="error">The "password" field doesn't match the "repeat_password" field!</span>

 */

form_yes_no_toggle($name, $value)

Parameter Type Description
$name String The name of the inputs
$value String/bool Checked state as y/n or TRUE/FALSE
Returns String Form inputs as HTML

Creates the typical EE yes/no options for a form

form_preference($name, $details)

Parameter Type Description
$name String The name of the field
$details Mixed\[\] The details related to the field (e.g. array('type' => 'r', 'value' => 'us', 'subtext' => '', 'selected' => 'us'))
Returns String Form input as HTML

Parses the data from ee()->config->prep_view_vars() and returns the appropriate form control.

cp_form_submit($value, $work_text[, $name = NULL[, $invalid = FALSE]])

Parameter Type Description
$value String Standard text for the button
$work_text String Text to display when form is submitting
$name String The value of a name=”” attribute
$invalid String Force an invalid/disabled state on the button
Returns String Button HTML

Outputs a standard CP form submit button in the current state of the form validation result. If there are errors, this button will be in a disabled state on load. Button text will be “Errors Found” if there are errors, otherwise the value of $value will be used.