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@hackages/ngxerrors
Advanced tools
A forked version of @ultimate/ngxerrors with angular 6.0.3
Why use ngx-errors, how to install and use.
Declarative validation error messages for reactive forms.
Typically you'd do something like this:
<!-- without ngxErrors -->
<input type="text" formControlName="foo">
<div *ngIf="form.get('foo').hasError('required') && form.get('foo').touched">
Field is required
</div>
<div *ngIf="form.get('foo').hasError('minlength') && form.get('foo').dirty">
Min length is 5
</div>
With ngxErrors, we've taken a simple declarative approach that cleans up your templates to make validation easier:
<!-- with ngxErrors -->
<input type="text" formControlName="foo">
<div ngxErrors="foo">
<div ngxError="required" when="touched">
Field is required
</div>
<div ngxError="minlength" when="dirty">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
Check out the documentation below for all the syntax we provide.
yarn add @hackages/ngxerrors
# OR
npm i @hackages/ngxerrors
Just add ngx-errors to your module:
import { NgxErrorsModule } from '@hackages/ngxerrors';
@NgModule({ imports: [ NgxErrorsModule ] })
The ngxErrors
directive works by dynamically fetching your FormControl under-the-hood, so simply take your formControlName
value and pass it into ngxErrors
:
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="username">
// ...
</div>
This needs to be on a parent container that will encapsulate child ngxError
directives.
The ngxError
directive takes either a string
or array
as arguments. The argument you pass in corresponds to any active errors exposed on your control, such as "required" or "minlength":
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="username">
<div ngxError="minlength">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
Note: when using array syntax,
[]
bindings are needed
Using the array syntax, when any condition in the array is true the error will be shown:
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="username">
<div [ngxError]="['minlength', 'maxlength']">
Min length is 5, max length is 10
</div>
</div>
The when
directive takes either a string
or array
as arguments. It allows you to specify when you wish to display the error based on the control state, such as "dirty" or "touched":
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="username">
<div ngxError="minlength" when="dirty">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
It also comes in array format for multiple rules:
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="username">
<div ngxError="minlength" [when]="['dirty', 'touched']">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
You can optionally data-bind and dynamically create validation errors with ngxErrors:
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="person.username">
<div *ngFor="let error of errors" [ngxError]="error.name" [when]="error.rules">
{{ error.text }}
</div>
</div>
With corresponding component class:
@Component({...})
export class MyComponent {
errors = [
{ name: 'required', text: 'This field is required', rules: ['touched', 'dirty'] },
{ name: 'minlength', text: 'Min length is 5', rules: ['dirty'] }
];
}
ngxErrors also supports FormGroups with control names using dot notation:
<div formGroupName="person">
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="person.username">
<div ngxError="minlength" [when]="['dirty', 'touched']">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
</div>
ngx-errors exports itself as ngxErrors
, which means you can access information about your control error states elsewhere in your template using a template reference, such as #foo
.
Basic usage:
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors"></div>
The getError
method returns the object associated with your error. This can be useful for dynamically displaying error rules.
Example: Adds
Min length is 5
when value is less than 5 characters (based onValidators.minLength(5)
).
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="minlength" when="dirty">
Min length should be {{ myError.getError('minlength')?.requiredLength }}
</div>
</div>
The error returned is identical to Angular's FormControl API
The hasError
method informs you if your control has the given error. This can be useful for styling elsewhere in your template based off the control's error state.
Example: Adds
class="required"
when "myError" has therequired
error.
<div [class.required]="myError.hasError('required')">
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
</div>
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="required" when="dirty">
Field is required
</div>
</div>
You can optionally pass in conditions in which to activate the error.
Example: Adds
class="required"
when "myError" has therequired
error and the states are'dirty'
and'touched'
.
<div [class.required]="myError.hasError('required', ['dirty', 'touched'])">
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
</div>
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="required" when="dirty">
Field is required
</div>
</div>
You can also use the "catch-all" selector to get the state of your entire control's validity, alongside on an optional state collection.
<div>
<div [ngClass]="{
invalid: myError.hasError('*'),
invalidTouchedDirty: myError.hasError('*', ['touched', 'dirty'])
}">
</div>
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
</div>
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="required" when="dirty">
Field is required
</div>
</div>
The isValid
method informs you if a your control is valid, or a property is valid. This can be useful for styling elsewhere in your template based off the control's validity state.
Example: Adds
class="valid"
when "myError" has norequired
error.
<div [class.valid]="myError.isValid('required')">
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
</div>
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="required" when="dirty">
Field is required
</div>
</div>
You can optionally pass in conditions in which to evaluate alongside the property you're checking is valid.
Example: Adds
class="valid"
when "myError" has norequired
error and the states are'dirty'
and'touched'
.
<div [class.valid]="myError.isValid('required', ['dirty', 'touched'])">
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
</div>
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="required" when="dirty">
Field is required
</div>
</div>
You can also use the "catch-all" selector to check if the control is valid, with no specific error properties, alongside on an optional state collection.
<div>
<div [ngClass]="{
valid: myError.isValid('*'),
validTouchedDirty: myError.isValid('*', ['touched', 'dirty'])
}">
</div>
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
</div>
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="required" when="dirty">
Field is required
</div>
</div>
The hasErrors
property returns true
if your control has any number of errors. This can be useful for styling elsewhere in your template on a global control level rather than individual errors.
Example: Adds
class="errors"
when "myError" has any errors.
<div [class.errors]="myError.hasErrors">
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
</div>
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="required" when="dirty">
Field is required
</div>
<div ngxError="minlength" when="dirty">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
The errors
property returns the object associated with any active errors. This can be used to access any error properties on your control.
Example: Adds
Max length is 10, you typed (n)
when value is more than 10 characters (based onValidators.maxLength(10)
).
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="username" #myError="ngxErrors">
<div ngxError="minlength" when="dirty">...</div>
<div ngxError="maxlength" when="dirty">...</div>
</div>
<div *ngIf="myError.errors?.maxlength">
Max length is 10, you typed {{ myError.errors.maxlength.actualLength }}
</div>
The errors returned are identical to Angular's FormControl API
Please see the contributing guidelines.
FAQs
A declarative validation module for reactive forms
The npm package @hackages/ngxerrors receives a total of 70 weekly downloads. As such, @hackages/ngxerrors popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @hackages/ngxerrors demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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