All of Shoelace's components make use of the [shadow DOM](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Web_Components/Using_shadow_DOM) to encapsulate markup, styles, and behavior. One caveat of this approach is that native `<form>` elements don't recognize Shoelace form controls.
This component solves that problem by serializing _both_ Shoelace form controls and native form controls. The resulting form data is exposed in the `slSubmit` event in a [`FormData`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/FormData) object.
?> Shoelace forms don't make use of `action` and `method` attributes and they don't submit like native forms. To handle submission, you need to listen for the `slSubmit` event as shown in the example above and make an XHR request with the resulting form data.
## Form Control Validation
Client-side validation can be enabled through the browser's [constraint validations API](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/HTML/HTML5/Constraint_validation) for many form controls. You can enable it using props such as `required`, `pattern`, `minlength`, `maxlength`, and `customValidity`. As the user interacts with the form control, the `invalid` attribute will reflect its validity based on its current value and the constraints that have been defined.
When a form control is invalid, the containing form will not be submitted. Instead, the browser will show the user a relevant error message.
Form controls that support validation include [`sl-input`](/components/input), [`sl-textarea`](/components/textarea), [`sl-select`](/components/select), and [`sl-checkbox`](/components/checkbox). Not all validation props are available for every component. Refer to each component's documentation to see which validation props it supports.
Note that validity is not checked until the user interacts with the control or its containing form is submitted. This prevents required controls from being rendered as invalid right away, which can result in a poor user experience. If you need this behavior, set the `invalid` attribute initially.
!> Client-side validation can be used to improve the UX of forms, but it is not a replacement for server-side validation. **You should always validate and sanitize user input on the server!**
### Required Fields
To make a field required, use the `required` prop. The form will not be submitted if a required form control is empty.
const form = document.querySelector('.input-validation-required');
form.addEventListener('slSubmit', () => alert('All fields are valid!'));
</script>
```
### Input Patterns
To restrict a value to a specific [pattern](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Attributes/pattern), use the `pattern` attribute. This example only allows the letters A-Z, so the form will not submit if a number or symbol is entered. This only works with `<sl-input>` elements.
To create a custom validation error, use the `setCustomValidity` method. The form will not be submitted when this method is called with anything other than an empty string, and its message will be shown by the browser as the error message.
The `invalid` attribute reflects the form control's validity, so you can style invalid fields using the `[invalid]` selector. The example below demonstrates how you can give erroneous fields a different appearance. Type something other than "shoelace" to demonstrate this.