Despite all of the buzz around html5 forms, it seems to me like you are creating extra work, in most scenarios, by going this route.

Take, for example, a datepicker field. The native html5 implementation of this renders differently in every browser. In addition your polyfilled solution (jquery UI for instance), for a browser not supporting this feature, will also render differently.

Now, we have introduced multiple points of customization and maintenance for the same form, when we had a perfectly working and unified solution with jquery!

I'd love to hear about some real world experiences in this area, because I'm getting annoyed with all of the buzz!

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64% accept rate
Why shouldn't the native html5 implementation render differently in every browser? The only people that look at one website in lots of different browsers are web designers. The important thing for usability is it looks the same in one browser in all sites, not that your site looks identical in all browsers. – robertc Jan 30 at 17:40
In my experience, designers and clients can't accept that. Most want these elements to match their themes very closely in ALL browsers. – drogon Jan 30 at 17:44
I'm not sure that wanting a unified look and feel for form elements makes you a bad designer. Also, the clients usually want the same thing as well. I don't think I could dismiss them as well. – drogon Jan 30 at 19:17
Unified across what? Something only the designer (and perhaps the client) cares about. – robertc Jan 30 at 23:28
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1 Answer

up vote 6 down vote accepted

First of all I'm the creator of webshims lib (one of those polyfills). To anwser your question:

Is it worth to create a forms polyfill for a project?

No, it is really hard to do this just for one project. Well, I have done it, simply because I want to use modern technologies.

Is it worth to use a forms polyfill like webshims lib for a project?

Yes absolutley! And here is why:

1. Nice standardized declarative Markup API

After including webshims and scripting the following:

//polyfill forms (constraint validation) and forms-ext (date, range etc.)    
$.webshims.polyfill('forms forms-ext');

You can simply write your widgets and your constraints into your form:

<input type="date" />
<input type="date min="2012-10-11" max="2111-01-01" />
<input type="range" disabled />
<input type="email" required placeholder="Yo you can use a placeholder" />

This will create 3 different widgets and each are configured differently. No extra JS needed just standardized, clean and lean code.

2. Standardized DOM-API

Same goes to the DOM API. Here are just two examples: Combining two date fields and combining a range field with a date field.

3. works without JS in modern browsers

Degrades gracefully in old brwosers and works well in modern ones.

4. Less filesize in modern browsers

Especially good for mobile (iOS 5, Blackberry have support for date for example)

5. Better UX [mostly mobile]

Better mobile UX (better input UI for touch, better performance, fits to the system), if you are using it: type="email", type="number" and type="date"/type="range"

But still, what about customizability?

I'm a developer in a bigger agency and you are absolutly right most clients and most designers won't tolerate much differences, but I still want to use modern technologies, which means webshims lib can give you the best of both worlds.

Customizing the constraint validation

The polyfilling part

//polyfill constraint validation
$.webshims.polyfill('forms');

Customizing the UI for the error-bubble:

//on DOM-ready
$(function(){
    $('form').bind('firstinvalid', function(e){ 
        //show the invalid alert for first invalid element 
        $.webshims.validityAlert.showFor( e.target ); 
        //prevent browser from showing native validation message 
        return false; 
    });
});

generates the following markup:

<!-- the JS code above will generate the following custom styleable HTML markup for the validation alert -->
<span class="validity-alert-wrapper" role="alert"> 
    <span class="validity-alert"> 
        <span class="va-arrow"><span class="va-arrow-box"></span></span> 
        <span class="va-box">Error message of the current field</span> 
    </span> 
</span>

Customizing the style of an invalid/valid form field:

.form-ui-invalid {
    border-color: red;
}

.form-ui-valid {
    border-color: green;
}

Customizing the text of the validity alert:

<input required data-errormessage="Hey this is required!!!" />

And now, what's the point:

  1. still works without JS
  2. modern browsers load only the customization code (3kb min/gzipped) and old browsers do load the additional API (about 13kb min/gzip) (forms include a lot more than just constraint validation API, for example there is also autofocus, placeholder, output and so on)

And what is with your special example, customizing the datefield?

No problem:

//configure webshims to use customizeable widget UI in all browsers
$.webshims.setOptions('forms-ext', { 
    replaceUI: true
});

$.webshims.polyfill('forms forms-ext');

And also here:

  1. still works without JS in modern browsers
  2. modern browsers only load the UI and the UI-API glue, but not the DOM-API (valueAsNumber, valueAsDate...)

And now, here comes the best:

//configure webshims to use customizeable widget UI in all non mobile browsers, but a customizeable one in all desktop and all non-capable mobile browsers
$.webshims.setOptions('forms-ext', { 
    //oh, I know this is bad browser sniffing :-(
    replaceUI: !(/mobile|ipad|iphone|fennec|android/i.test(navigator.userAgent))
});

$.webshims.polyfill('forms forms-ext');
  1. less filesize and a better UX for mobile browsers (most clients and most designers will love you for having a different UI in mobile!!!)
  2. still works without JS in modern browsers
  3. modern browsers only load the UI and the UI-API glue, but not the DOM-API (valueAsNumber, valueAsDate...)
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Thanks, Alexander. I actually spent last week looking at webshim --I even have a sample running locally --amazing work and thank you! I will play around with an exhaustive form sample and learn more. – drogon Feb 3 at 20:02
Also, One more thing. In asp.net MVC, we have the ability to define data annotation to classes in server side code. These annotations define and provide validation both server side and client-side (via jquery forms validation plugin and "unobtrusive validation"). Most MVC devs are married to this because it makes their life so much easier when doing validation. I'll also be looking at the easiest way to marry the 2 by customizing the unobtrusive script... – drogon Feb 3 at 20:06
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