validatorjs
The validatorjs library makes data validation in JavaScript very easy in both the browser and Node.js. This library was inspired by the Laravel framework's Validator.
Why use validatorjs?
- Not dependent on any libraries.
- Works in both the browser and Node.
- Readable and declarative validation rules.
- Error messages with multilingual support.
- AMD/Require.js and CommonJS/Browserify support.
Installation
Grab validatorjs from Bower, NPM, or the /dist directory on Github:
bower install validatorjs
npm install validatorjs
Browser
<script src="validator.min.js"></script>
Node.js / Browserify
var Validator = require('validatorjs');
Basic Usage
var validation = new Validator(data, rules [, customErrorMessages]);
data {Object} - The data you want to validate
rules {Object} - Validation rules
customErrorMessages {Object} - Optional custom error messages to return
Example 1 - Passing validation
var data = {
name: 'John',
email: 'johndoe@gmail.com',
age: 28
};
var rules = {
name: 'required',
email: 'required|email',
age: 'min:18'
};
var validation = new Validator(data, rules);
validation.passes();
validation.fails();
To apply validation rules to the data object, use the same object key names for the rules object.
Example 2 - Failing validation
var validation = new Validator({
name: 'D',
email: 'not an email address.com'
}, {
name: 'size:3',
email: 'required|email'
});
validation.fails();
validation.passes();
validation.errors.first('email');
validation.errors.get('email');
Available Rules
Validation rules do not have an implicit 'required'. If a field is undefined or an empty string, it will pass validation. If you want a validation to fail for undefined or '', use the required rule.
accepted
The field under validation must be yes, on, 1 or true. This is useful for validating "Terms of Service" acceptance.
alpha
The field under validation must be entirely alphabetic characters.
alpha_dash
The field under validation may have alpha-numeric characters, as well as dashes and underscores.
alpha_num
The field under validation must be entirely alpha-numeric characters.
array
The field under validation must be an array.
between:min,max
The field under validation must have a size between the given min and max. Strings, numerics, and files are evaluated in the same fashion as the size rule.
confirmed
The field under validation must have a matching field of foo_confirmation. For example, if the field under validation is password, a matching password_confirmation field must be present in the input.
digits:value
The field under validation must be numeric and must have an exact length of value.
different:attribute
The given field must be different than the field under validation.
email
The field under validation must be formatted as an e-mail address.
in:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must be included in the given list of values. The field can be an array or string.
integer
The field under validation must have an integer value.
max:value
Validate that an attribute is no greater than a given size
Note: Maximum checks are inclusive.
min:value
Validate that an attribute is at least a given size.
Note: Minimum checks are inclusive.
not_in:foo,bar,...
The field under validation must not be included in the given list of values.
numeric
Validate that an attribute is numeric. The string representation of a number will pass.
required
Checks if the length of the String representation of the value is >
same:attribute
The given field must match the field under validation.
size:value
The field under validation must have a size matching the given value. For string data, value corresponds to the number of characters. For numeric data, value corresponds to a given integer value.
string
The field under validation must be a string.
url
Validate that an attribute has a valid URL format
regex:pattern
The field under validation must match the given regular expression.
Note: When using the regex
pattern, it may be necessary to specify rules in an array instead of using pipe delimiters, especially if the regular expression contains a pipe character.
For each backward slash that you used in your regex pattern, you must escape each one with another backward slash.
Example 3 - Regex validation
var validation = new Validator({
name: 'Doe',
salary: '10,000.00',
yearOfBirth: '1980'
}, {
name: 'required|size:3',
salary: ['required', 'regex:/^(?!0\\.00)\\d{1,3}(,\\d{3})*(\\.\\d\\d)?$/'],
yearOfBirth: ['required', 'regex:/^(19|20)[\\d]{2,2}$/']
});
validation.fails();
validation.passes();
Registering Custom Validation Rules
Validator.register(name, callbackFn, errorMessage);
name {String} - The name of the rule.
callbackFn {Function} - Returns a boolean to represent a successful or failed validation.
errorMessage {String} - An optional string where you can specify a custom error message. :attribute inside errorMessage will be replaced with the attribute name.
Validator.register('telephone', function(value, requirement, attribute) {
return value.match(/^\d{3}-\d{3}-\d{4}$/);
}, 'The :attribute phone number is not in the format XXX-XXX-XXXX.');
Asynchronous validation
Register an asynchronous rule which accepts a passes
callback:
Validator.registerAsync('username_available', function(username, attribute, req, passes) {
passes();
passes(false, 'Username has already been taken.');
});
Then call your validator passing a callback to fails
or passes
like so:
var validator = new Validator({ username: 'test123' }, { username: 'required|min:3|username_available' });
validator.passes(function() {
});
validator.fails(function() {
validator.errors.first('username');
});
Note: if you attempt to call passes
or fails
without a callback and the validator detects there are asynchronous validation rules, an exception will be thrown.
Error Messages
This contructor will automatically generate error messages for validation rules that failed.
If there are errors, the Validator instance will have its errors property object populated with the error messages for all failing attributes. The methods and properties on the errors property object are:
.first(attribute)
returns the first error message for an attribute, false otherwise
.get(attribute)
returns an array of error messages for an attribute, or an empty array if there are no errors
.all()
returns an object containing all error messages for all failing attributes
.has(attribute)
returns true if error messages exist for an attribute, false otherwise
.errorCount
the number of validation errors
var validation = new Validator(input, rules);
validation.errors.first('email');
validator.errors.get('email');
Custom Error Messages
If you need a specific error message and you don't want to override the default one, you can pass an override as the third argument to the Validator object, just like with Laravel.
var input = {
name: ''
};
var rules = {
name : 'required'
};
var validation = new Validator(input, rules, { required: 'You forgot to give a :attribute' });
validation.errors.first('name');
Some of the validators have string and numeric versions. You can change them too.
var input = {
username: 'myusernameistoolong'
};
var rules = {
username : 'max:16'
};
var validation = new Validator(input, rules, {
max: {
string: 'The :attribute is too long. Max length is :max.'
}
});
validation.errors.first('username');
You can even provide error messages on a per attribute basis! Just set the message's key to 'validator.attribute'
var input = { name: '', email: '' };
var rules = { name : 'required', email : 'required' };
var validation = new Validator(input, rules, {
"required.email": "Without an :attribute we can't reach you!"
});
validation.errors.first('name');
validation.errors.first('email');
Custom attribute names
To display a custom "friendly" attribute name in error messages, use .setAttributeNames()
var validator = new Validator({ name: '' }, { name: 'required' });
validator.setAttributeNames({ name: 'custom_name' });
if (validator.fails()) {
validator.errors.first('name');
}
Alternatively you can supply global custom attribute names in your lang with the attributes
property.
You can also configure a custom attribute formatter:
Validator.setAttributeFormatter(function(attribute) {
return attribute.replace(/_/g, ' ');
});
var validator = new Validator({ first_name: '' }, { first_name: 'required' });
validator.setAttributeFormatter(function(attribute) {
return attribute.replace(/_/g, ' ');
});
if (validator.fails()) {
console.log(validator.errors.first('first_name'));
}
Note: by default all _[] characters will be replaced with spaces.
Language Support
Error messages are in English by default. To include another language in the browser, reference the language file in a script tag and call Validator.useLang('lang_code')
.
<script src="dist/validator.min.js"></script>
<script src="dist/lang/ru.js"></script>
<script>
Validator.useLang('es');
</script>
In Node, it will automatically pickup on the language source files.
var Validator = require('validatorjs');
Validator.useLang('ru');
If you don't see support for your language, please add one to src/lang
!
You can also add your own custom language by calling setMessages
:
Validator.setMessages('lang_code', {
required: 'The :attribute field is required.',
....
....
});
Get the raw object of messages for the given language:
Validator.getMessages('lang_code');
Switch the default language used by the validator:
Validator.useLang('lang_code');
Get the default language being used:
Validator.getDefaultLang();
Override default messages for language:
var messages = Validator.getMessages('en');
messages.required = 'Whoops, :attribute field is required.';
Validator.setMessages('en', messages);