ngxErrors
A declarative validation module for reactive forms.
Overview
Why use ngxErrors, how to install and include.
What is it?
Form validation made easy for reactive forms. Typically you'd do something like this:
<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:
<input type="text" formControlName="foo">
<div ngxErrors="foo">
<div ngError="required" when="touched">
Field is required
</div>
<div ngError="minlength" when="dirty">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
Check out the documentation below for all the syntax we provide.
Installation
yarn add @ultimate/ngxerrors
npm i @ultimate/ngxerrors
Setup
Just add ngxErrors to your module:
import { NgxErrorsModule } from '@ultimate/ngxerrors';
@NgModule({ imports: [ NgxErrorsModule ] })
Documentation
ngxErrors
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.
ngxError
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 an error, will show the error message when either condition are true:
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div ngxErrors="username">
<div [ngxError]="['minlength', 'maxlength']">
Min length is 5, max length is 10
</div>
</div>
ngxError #when
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 nxgErrors="username">
<div nxgError="minlength" when="dirty">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
It also comes in array format for multiple rules:
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div nxgErrors="username">
<div [nxgError]="minlength" [when]="['dirty', 'touched']">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
Dynamic errors
You can optionally data-bind and dynamically create validation errors with nxgErrors:
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div nxgErrors="person.username">
<div *ngFor="let error of errors" [nxgError]="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'] }
];
}
Nested FormGroup support
nxgErrors also supports FormGroups with control names using dot notation:
<div formGroupName="person">
<input type="text" formControlName="username">
<div nxgErrors="person.username">
<div nxgError="minlength" [when]="['dirty', 'touched']">
Min length is 5
</div>
</div>
</div>
Contributing
Please see the contributing guidelines.