/zuora-compat-country-region-selector

Zuora compatible country and region selector

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Zuora Compatible Country Region Selector

Original author: https://github.com/country-regions/country-region-selector

Original country and region data: https://github.com/country-regions/country-region-data/blob/master/data.json

About

Connected country and region dropdown, where the region field gets automatically updated when the user selects a country. This is compatible with Zuora, namely the states/regions for United States and Canada. Zuora validates these two countries and not any other.

The files contain all the country and region strings. If you know you're only going to need a small subset of all countries, you may want to generate a custom build containing only that info. That will substantially reduce the file size. See the Custom Builds section at the bottom of this page for more info.

Features

  • Lets you customize the default "Please select" field for each country/region with whatever language you want.
  • Lets you specify a default value for each field.
  • Lets you customize the appearance and value of the country field ("Canada" or "CA") - they can be different, if desired (e.g. 2 char code for saving to database; full name for displaying purposes).
  • Lets you have as many country-region-mapped fields as you need in your page.
  • The standalone version has no dependencies on other any libs (jQuery etc) and you can include the JS file anywhere you want (head/foot).
  • Works with dynamically inserted DOM content.

How to Use

It's very easy.

  1. Include the crs.min.js file in your webpage.
  2. Add two <select> fields in the appropriate locations in your form.
  3. Give the country field a class of crs-country.
  4. Now we need to map each country field to its corresponding region field so the script knows what to update when a country is selected. Add an attribute to the country dropdown: data-region-id="ABC" where ABC is any string. Now Give the region dropdown an id of "ABC".
  5. That's it! You're done.

But here's a few more tips for further configuration.

Default "Please select" Values

If you want to add default "Please select" options to either the country or region fields, just go ahead and add it directly in the markup. The script will append the country and region <option> fields - not overwrite them.

Adding default values for each field

If your form is used for people returning to it (e.g. "Edit Contact Info" or whatever), you'll need the country and region fields to be prefilled with the appropriate value on page load. To do that, just add a data-default-value="" attribute to each element containing the country / region value last saved. Note: the region value will only ever be populated if the country field is as well.

List of data-* attributes

This lists all the available data-* attributes that you can add to the country/region fields to customize the appearance and behaviour.

country fields
  • data-region-id - required. This should contain the ID of the region field that it's being mapped to.
  • data-default-option - optional. Default: "Select country". This determines the default, blank option display value.
  • data-show-default-option - optional. True by default. This shows the "Select Country" default option (or whatever string you've set). Set it to "false" to turn it off.
  • data-default-value - optional. The default selected value in the country dropdown (e.g. "Canada")
  • data-value="shortcode" - optional. The default behaviour is for the value attributes of the country dropdown options to be the full country name. If you'd rather use a 2-char code, add this attribute. Note: the 2-char codes are mostly ISO standard 2-char country codes, but not all. They are, however, unique across the dataset. N.B. This setting used to be named 2-char, but was renamed for consistency with the new region option. For backward compatibility 2-char still works.
  • data-whitelist - optional. A comma-delimited lists of country shortcodes that you want to appear in the dropdown. Anything not specified here will be omitted. Take look here for the country list: source/data.json - you'll want to use the second index of the array, e.g. "AF" for Afghanistan, or "DE" for Germany. Note: if you're worried about file sizes, you can also choose to generate a custom build of the script that only contains those countries you need. This would replace the need for this option. See the Custom Builds section below.
  • data-blacklist - optional. Like the data-whitelist, only a blacklist! This lets you display all countries except the countries that you specify here. If you supply both white and blacklists, the blacklist setting is ignored. Just enter a comma delimited list of country shortcodes. Again, take look here for the country list + their shortcodes: source/data.json
  • data-preferred - optional. Lets you target specific countries to get listed at the top of the country dropdown. This should contain a comma-delimited list of the country short codes you want moved, e.g. data-preferred="CA,US,MX".
  • data-preferred-delim - optional. If you use the data-preferred option, you may want a line separating them from the other countries in the list. This setting lets you provide a string that will act as separator.
region fields
  • data-blank-option - before the user selects a country, there's a single displayed which by default is the "-" character.
  • data-default-option - optional. Default: "Select region". This determines the default, blank option display value that shows up after a user has selected a country.
  • data-show-default-option - optional. True by default. This shows the "Select Region" default option (or whatever string you've set). Set it to "false" to turn it off.
  • data-default-value - optional. The default selected value in the region dropdown (e.g. "British Columbia", or "BC" if using the data-value="shortcode" option)
  • data-value="shortcode" - optional. By default, region dropdowns will display the full region name. This option lets you show a 2-code abbreviation instead. Please note that all the abbreviations have not yet been added. See this thread that explains how the structure works. If a region field is set to 2-char and a user user selects a country that doesn't have a region, it will show the full country name instead.

Working with dynamic HTML

In case your page is being generated on the fly, you'll need to manually re-initialize the script after the new DOM content is inserted.

AMD example

With AMD (requireJS), just include the lib as you usually would. If you inspect the return value, you'll see it has a single init function. Just call that method whenever you need it (i.e. after new DOM content is inserted into your page).

define(['/path/to/crs.min'], function(crs) {
    // when you're ready...
    crs.init();
});
Plain vanilla JS example

If you're just including the crs.min.js in a <script> tag in your page, it'll automatically expose a crs property on your global window object. Then you can call window.crs.init() whenever your new page content has been dynamically inserted. That will initialize the newly inserted country-region fields.

Custom Builds

As of 0.2.4, you can generate a custom version of the library that contains only those countries you need. This can substantially reduce the overall file size, if that's important to you.

To do this, follow the instructions in the following section to get your dev environment set up, then instead of the last step, run: grunt customBuild --countries="Canada,United States"

Just add whatever countries you want to include. To find the exact country names, take a look at the data in source/data.json

This will generate new files in the /dist folder that you can use.

If the country name you're targeting contains a comma, just escape with with a single backslash, like so: grunt customBuild --countries="Côte d'Ivoire\, Republic of, Congo\, Republic of the (Brazzaville)"

Notes for Developers

The unminified source is found in the /source folder. To re-generate the minified version, just run the Grunt task. In case you're not familiar with Grunt, here's how you get that hooked up.

  1. Install Node on your computer.
  2. Clone this repository to your local computer.
  3. In the command line, navigate to to the root of the cloned repo (i.e. the folder with this README file in it).
  4. Type npm install to download all necessary require modules.
  5. Type npm install -g grunt-cli to install the Grunt command line tool to run properly.
  6. Type grunt generate

That will then re-generate the minified files in your ./dist folder.

Changelog

  • 0.1.5 - October 27, 2022. Building distributable
  • 0.1.4 - October 27, 2022. Updating the country name Macedonia
  • 0.1.3 - September 23, 2021. Initial working release

License

MIT.