Use standard HTML5 markup to create fully functional forms for WordPress
- Uses only HTML5 syntax to build forms. No GUIs, shortcodes, no bullshit
- Works with any valid HTML form. Just copy any form from any website and it will work. It's magic!
- Submissions are saved as custom post type posts. Form values are saved as custom fields.
- Validates required fields tagged with the native HTML5
required
attribute. - It's hackable. Add your own functionality with hooks and APIs.
- Email notifications of received form submissions
- Full file upload support to Media Library with input type=file
- Multilingual support with Polylang
- Predefined static HTML forms via filter hooks
Modern HTML markup is already a great way to build forms. With Libre Form, there's no need to learn clunky form builders that are hard to customise.
Just use standard HTML inputs to build, or copy a form to your WordPress site that will just magically work. No need to touch PHP code if you don't want to.
Required field validation, email notifications, file uploads to WP gallery and lots more are included by default in the core of the plugin, but you can also add your own functionality with hooks and APIs provided by Libre Form.
TryoutWP has provided us with a live demo, which you can find here. It reflects the current release, not the master branch.
Install the plugin via Composer
composer require anttiviljami/wp-libre-form
Activate the plugin
wp plugin activate wp-libre-form
This plugin is available on the official WordPress.org plugin directory.
You can also install the plugin by directly uploading the zip file as instructed below:
- Download the plugin
- Upload to the plugin to /wp-content/plugins/ via the WordPress plugin uploader or your preferred method
- Activate the plugin
Used to add validation to your forms.
This filter supports form specific hooks:
wplf_{form_id}_validate_submission
wplf_{form_slug}_validate_submission
These filters are only applied for the target form by ID or slug.
/**
* ReCaptcha for WP Libre Form
*/
add_filter( 'wplf_validate_submission', 'wplf_recaptcha' );
function wplf_recaptcha( $return ) {
// skip this validation if submission has already failed
if ( ! $return->ok ) {
return $return;
}
$secret = RECAPTCHA_KEY; // substitute with your own secret recaptcha key string
$options = [
'http' => [
'header' => "Content-type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded\r\n",
'method' => 'POST',
'content' => http_build_query([
'secret' => $secret,
'response' => $_POST['g-recaptcha-response'],
])
],
];
$context = stream_context_create( $options );
$result = file_get_contents( 'https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/siteverify', false, $context );
$captcha_obj = json_decode( $result );
if ( false === $captcha_obj->success ) {
$return->ok = 0;
$return->error = __("Please prove you're not a robot before submitting.");
}
return $return;
}
Triggers after the form validation is done.
This action supports form specific hooks:
wplf_{form_id}_post_validate_submission
wplf_{form_slug}_post_validate_submission
These actions are only run for the target form by ID or slug.
add_action( 'wplf_post_validate_submission', 'my_email_thankyou' );
function my_email_thankyou( $return ) {
// recipient details from submission
$name = sanitize_text_field( $_POST['name'] );
$email = sanitize_email( $_POST['email'] );
// email subject
$subject = __( 'Thank You For Submitting A Form' );
// text body of email
$body = wp_sprintf( __('Thanks, %s for clicking Submit on this glorious HTML5 Form!'), $name );
// send the email
wp_mail( $email, $subject, $body );
}
Dynamically generated fields are disabled by default. If you want to allow fields that are not set in the form to be submitted you can use this filter.
This filter supports form specific hooks:
wplf_{form_id}_disable_validate_additional_fields
wplf_{form_slug}_disable_validate_additional_fields
These filters are only applied for the target form by ID or slug.
Disabling additonal fields validation for all forms:
add_filter( 'wplf_disable_validate_additional_fields' , __return_false );
WP Libre Form supports client side callbacks after form submission using window.wplf object. Example usage:
window.wplf.successCallbacks.push(res => alert('Form submission success: ' + res.form_id));
window.wplf.errorCallbacks.push(() => alert('Form submission failed!'));
These callbacks are executed in the order they appear.
To avoid running your JavaScript too early, add wplf-form-js
to your enqueue dependencies:
wp_enqueue_script( "themejs", "/path/to/theme.js", array( "wplf-form-js" ), ... );
Otherwise you might run into errors like "Cannot read property 'push' of undefined".
You can get forms out of the REST API. Just use /wp/v2/wplf-form
to retrieve forms. You can get a singular form by using filters:
/wp/v2/wplf-form?slug=form-slug
However, if you're sending forms from a different domain than WP site URL, you'll run across a CORS issue submitting the form, which you can get around with this:
add_action('wplf_pre_validate_submission', function() {
$origin = $_SERVER['HTTP_ORIGIN'];
header("Access-Control-Allow-Origin: $origin");
header("Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true");
});
Do note that the above code snippet opens your form submissions to the world.
You can also use the "official" JS bundle if you want to.
window.ajax_object = {
ajax_url: `${WP.url}/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php`,
ajax_credentials: 'include', // different origin
wplf_assets_dir: `${WP.url}/wp-content/plugins/wp-libre-form/assets`,
}
await new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
const script = document.createElement('script')
const timeout = setTimeout(reject, 30000)
script.src = `${WP.url}/wp-content/plugins/wp-libre-form/assets/scripts/wplf-form.js`
script.onload = (e) => {
clearInterval(timeout)
resolve()
}
document.body.appendChild(script)
})
You can create multilingual forms using Polylang. WPLF will register and automatically fetch the translation when you use special template tags.
Example:
<input type="text" placeholder="{{ Test string }}" name="test">
You can also disable this feature, and create your own middleware for WPML, if you'd like.
add_filter( 'wplf_load_polylang' , __return_false );
You can use the xclass attribute inside the shortcode to add your own extra classes for CSS.
[libre-form id="1" xclass="extra"]
You can add any custom attributes to the form element easily by adding them to the shortcode
[libre-form id="1" data-custom-attr="contactme"]
The attribute will render as is on the <form>
element
<form class="libre-form libre-form-1" data-custom-attr="contactme">
Sometimes a project might require static forms which are not supposed to be editable in the admin panel.
This plugin allows you to define HTML forms in your project source code and import them into the form admin for specific forms.
The simplest way is to create a HTML5 file and read its contents. Other options include using Twig to render HTML templates.
Remember: WPLF will insert form
tags on its own, meaning you only have
to create the markup which sits directly inside the form
tags.
Once you're done creating a form template, you need to inform
WPLF about it. You can use the wplf_import_html_template
filter hook for this:
<?php
add_filter( 'wplf_import_html_template', function ( $template, $form_id ) {
$some_form_id = 123;
if ( $form_id === $some_form_id ) {
// You can also render Twig templates and similar here
return file_get_contents( '/path/to/template/file.html' );
}
return $template;
}, 10, 2 );
The $template
variable should be a raw HTML string. If it is set to
null
no template will be imported.
After a template is imported for a certain form the form's editview will be set to read only mode, meaning you must make changes to the static HTML template in code instead of editing the form inside the admin panel.
Otherwise the form should function normally, meaning you can use WPLF features as always.