- Use some Ant Design `Row` and `Col`'s to layout your forms if you want to spread them out into responsive columns. If you use an `<Row>`s, be sure to use `<Col>`s with them too!
- Feel free to use the pre-styled `<TextField>` text form field or the `<ToggleSwitch>` component, in a group of form fields together. These have been styled and laid out to match each other.
-`Slider`'s - If your form uses an Ant Slider component, follow this recommended markup of CSS classes to maintain a consistent look and feel to other Sliders in the app.
- It would be nice to display indicators of success/warnings to let users know if something has been successfully updated on the server. It has a lot of steps (sorry, but it could probably be optimized), but it'll provide a consistent way to display messaging.
- This admin site chooses to have a generally Dark color palette, but with colors that are different from Ant design's _dark_ stylesheet, so that style sheet is not included. This results in a very large `ant-overrides.scss` file to reset colors on frequently used Ant components in the system. If you find yourself a new Ant Component that has not yet been used in this app, feel free to add a reset style for that component to the overrides stylesheet.
- When the Admin app loads, the `ServerStatusContext` (in addition to checking server `/status` on a timer) makes a call to the `/serverconfig` API to get your config details. This data will be stored as **`serverConfig`** in app state, and _provided_ to the app via `useContext` hook.
- The `serverConfig` in state is be the central source of data that pre-populates the forms.
- The `ServerStatusContext` also provides a method for components to update the serverConfig state, called `setFieldInConfigState()`.
- After you have updated a config value in a form field, and successfully submitted it through its endpoint, you should call `setFieldInConfigState` to update the global state with the new value.
1. Get the field values that you want out of `serverConfig` from ServerStatusContext with `useContext`.
2. Next we'll have to put these field values of interest into a `useState` in each grouping. This will help you edit the form.
3. Because ths config data is populated asynchronously, Use a `useEffect` to check when that data has arrived before putting it into state.
4. You will be using the state's value to populate the `defaultValue` and the `value` props of each Ant input component (`Input`, `Toggle`, `Switch`, `Select`, `Slider` are currently used).
5. When an `onChange` event fires for each type of input component, you will update the local state of each page with the changed value.
6. Depending on the form, an `onChange` of the input component, or a subsequent `onClick` of a submit button will take the value from local state and POST the field's API.
7.`onSuccess` of the post, you should update the global app state with the new value.
- Both of these elements are specifically meant to be used with updating `serverConfig` fields, since each field requires its own endpoint.
- Give these fields a bunch of props, and they will display labelling, some helpful UI around tips, validation messaging, as well as submit the update for you.
- (currently undergoing re-styling and TS cleanup)
- NOTE: you don't have to use these components. Some form groups may require a customized UX flow where you're better off using the Ant components straight up.