Microsoft just released the first preview of ASP.NET MVC Framework and it's Microsoft's way to develop Web applications based on the model-view-controller architecture. It will not replace the classic ASP.NET WebForms model. For more information about the new Framework, please see the Scott Guthrie's blog message.
The controller action
Within the HTML page, you need to initialize script validation for the login form (
In the next step, you define the HTML form as usual:
Finally, the script that defines the validation rules must be defined:
Since there is just a first preview version available, the final feature list is not complete. At this point of time, there is no built-in solution to validate an HTML form on the client and server-side using a standardized system. The Validator Toolkit for ASP.NET MVC offers a way to do form validation on the client and server-side using validation sets. The toolkit is a new project on Microsoft's Open Source Community site at CodePlex.com.
NOTICE: The latest version of the source code and the sample site for the Validator Toolkit can be downloaded from the CodePlex project (source code tab).
The screenshots below give you an idea about how the toolkit will work:
Here's another screenshot showing how the error messages can be displayed:
Now, let's start!
As mentioned above, the toolkit uses validation sets as a crucial element. Validation sets are special classes that derive from the
ValidationSet
base class and define all validation rules (validators) for an HTML form. The toolkit generates client-side JavaScript code based on the defined validators during the view rendering.
The client-side uses the very powerful
jQuery
JavaScript library in conjunction with the jQuery
validation plug-in to fulfil the final task of client validation. For more information regarding jQuery
and the plug-in, please take a look at the following links:
The validation plug-in used by the toolkit is slightly customized to support all the needed behaviour. Besides using the
jQuery
library for client validation, you can use it for a lot of other stuff, like animations or DOM manipulation. There are also a lot of plug-ins developed that extend the core library. Validation sets are also used to validate forms on the server (based on the Request.Form
collection).
Before we go ahead, let's have a look at a sample validation set:
public class LoginValidationSet : ValidationSet {
protected override ValidatorCollection GetValidators() {
return new ValidatorCollection (
new ValidateElement("username")
{ Required = true, MinLength = 5, MaxLength = 30 },
new ValidateElement("password")
{ Required = true, MinLength = 3, MaxLength = 50 }
);
}
}
This
LoginValidationSet
class defines the rules for validating a simple login form by overriding theGetValidators
method of the base class. The method must return a ValidatorCollection
instance with all validators used to validate the HTML form later on. In this case, the username field is required and the input for it must contain at least 5 characters and a maximum of 30 characters. The password field is required too, but within the boundaries of 3 and 50 characters.
The order of the defined validators also defines the execution order of validation process. If the toolkit would use custom attributes to set validation rules instead of the method
GetValidators
, there is no guarantee for the validation process to validate in the same order the attributes are defined, since the Type.GetCustomAttributes
method returns the attribute list in alphabetical order.
Of course, you can also write your own custom validators or you may use the
ValidateScriptMethod
validator which allows you to call a specific JavaScript function on the client-side and a method within the validation set class for the server-side. More on that later.
Once a validation set class is defined, you attach it to the view and the HTML form processing controller action using the
ValidationSet
attribute, like this://
// File: LoginController.cs
//
public class LoginController : Controller {
[ControllerAction]
public void Login() {
RenderView("Login");
}
[ControllerAction]
[ValidationSet(typeof(LoginValidationSet))]
public void Authenticate() {
if(this.ValidateForm())
RenderView("Overview");
else
RenderView("Login");
}
}
...
//
// File: Login.aspx.cs (CodeBehind)
//
[ValidationSet(typeof(LoginValidationSet))]
public partial class Login : ViewPage {
[ValidationSet(typeof(LoginValidationSet))]
public partial class Login : ViewPage {
}
}
Authenticate
then calls the ValidateForm
method, which uses the ValidationSet
attribute to do the server-side form validation, based on the NameValueCollection Request:Form
.Within the HTML page, you need to initialize script validation for the login form (
loginForm
) as follows:<script type="text/javascript">
$(function(){
updateSettingsForSample1ValidationSet($('#loginForm').validate({rules:{}}));
});
</script>
<form id="loginForm" action="/Login/Authenticate" method="post">
Username: <input type="text" id="username" name="username" /><br />
Password: <input type="text" id="password" name="password" /><br />
<input type="submit" value="Login" />
</form>
<% this.RenderValidationSetScripts(); %>
You also need to include the
jQuery
JavaScript library into the form or master page. See the Validator
Toolkit sample site for more information. Sample site of the toolkit includes the scripts in the master page:<script type="text/javascript" src="../../Content/jDate.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../../Content/jQuery.Core.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../../Content/jQuery.Delegate.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../../Content/jQuery.Validation.js"></script>
That's basically all you need to do - include form validation on the client and server-side. The next section gives you an overview of the standard validators and their usage.
Standard Validators
The toolkit offers a handful of standard validators out of the box. The following table gives you an overview of the provided validators:
ValidatePresence | Validates the presence of input value. Sample: new ValidatePresence("username")
|
ValidateDate | Validates input value against the given date formats. Setting theDateFormats property to a comma-separated list of date formats, allows you to check if the value is formatted in one of the specified formats. You may check for date formats like MM/ DD/ YYYY. If DateFormats is not defined, then the validator will use the culture information of the current thread.Sample: new ValidateDate("startDate", "yyyy-mm-dd,yyyymmdd")
new ValidateDate("startDate")
{ DateFormats = "yyyy-mm-dd,yyyymmdd" }
|
ValidateMin ValidateMax ValidateRange | Validates input value either against a minimum, maximum or integer range. Sample: new ValidateMin("step", 5)
new ValidateRange("step") { Min = 1, Max = 99 }
|
ValidateMinLength ValidateMaxLength ValidateRangeLength | Validates input value either against a minimum, maximum or integer range. Sample: new ValidateMaxLength("password ", 30)
new ValidateRangeLength("password")
{ MinLength = 5, MaxLength = 30 }
|
ValidateElement | Joins multiple validators into one validator to keep things simple and allows the following to validate: Required , Min , Max , MinLength ,MaxLength Sample: new ValidateElement("username")
{ Required = true, MinLength = 5 }
|
ValidateEqualTo | Validates input value against another input value. This validator is useful to compare password inputs. Sample: new ValidateEqualTo("password", "passwordAgain")
|
ValidateScriptMethod | Validates input value using a custom JavaScript function and validation set class method. Sample: new ValidateScriptMethod("username")
{ MethodName = "valUsername" }
new ValidateScriptMethod("username") {
MethodName = "valiUsername",
Parameters = "{Opt1:2, Opt2: "AB"}" }
|
There are still some validators missing, e.g. a general regular expression validator or a specific email validator.
Validation Sets
Each validation set definition class derives from the
ValidationSet
base class. This base class contains and offers common functionality for the validation process. Let's take a look at the sample below to explain some possibilities the validation set offers to validate complex forms:public class LoginValidationSet : ValidationSet {
string Username = "";
string Password = "";
protected override ValidatorCollection GetValidators() {
return new ValidatorCollection
(
new ValidateElement("username")
{ Required = true, MinLength = 5, MaxLength = 30 },
new ValidateElement("password")
{ Required = true, MinLength = 3, MaxLength = 50 },
new ValidateScriptMethod("username", "validateUsername")
);
}
protected bool ValidateUsername() {
// DO HERE SOME VALIDATION AND RETURN RESULT AS BOOLEAN VALUE
return true;
}
protected override void OnValidate() {
if(Username.StartsWith("billy") && Password.StartsWith("gat"))
throw new ValidatorException("username", "The username/password combination ");
}
}
Creating non-public instance member fields of type
String
like the Username
or Password
fields, allows the base class to populate those fields with the accompanying input field values. This is a simple way to access input values without checking the underlying values collection (e.g. Request.Form
).
The
ValidateScriptMethod
validator defines a JavaScript function (validateUsername
) to call during the client-side validation. This function must be defined or included in the HTML page. The ValidationSet
base class checks during the server-side validation if the current validation set class contains a case-insensitive method namedvalidateUsername
.
Once all validators defined with the
GetValidators
method are called during the validation process, the base class will call an overall method called OnValidate
. By overriding this method you can do some final validation. If you want to throw an exception you need to throw the ValidatorException
with the field name and message as parameters.
Using the described techniques, the possibilities of the
jQuery
library and the custom validators (see below), you can validate most complex forms quite efficiently. The next section will describe ways to localize the messages.Localization
It's easy to localize error messages of the toolkit using the standard folder. If the default settings are not changed, the default error message for each validator is stored in the ValidationSet.resx file (in the folder App_GlobalResources). The naming convention for the resource key is as follows:
<VALIDATORNAME>_DefaultErrorMessage
.
To change the default name of the ValidationSet.resx resource file, a derived validation set class can set the name by using the
static
field DefaultMessageResourceName
or by adding the MessageResourceName
attribute to the class. It is also possible to combine the techniques and use more than one resource file.
The sample site within the
Validator
Toolkit contains usage examples of localized error messages and field names. The localization is simple and straightforward.Custom Validators
Creating custom validators is quite simple, but requires some basic knowledge of the
jQuery
JavaScript library and the validation plug-in if the validator wants to support client validation. The sample site includes a custom validator called ValidateBuga
, which checks the input value against the constant string buga. Each validator derives from theValidator
class, which provides a couple of virtual methods a custom validator must override:GetClientMethodData | This method defines by returning an instance of theValidatorMethodData class the name of the custom validator (for the jQuery validation plug-in), the JavaScript function code and the default error message. |
GetClientRule | This method returns the plug-in client rule to use once the validator is defined within a validation set class. |
GetClientMessage | This method returns the localized error message for a given element. |
GetDefaultErrorMessageFormat | This method returns the default error message of the custom validator. |
Validate | This method validates the input value for the given element. If the input is not valid the validator must call the InsertError method of the Validator base class to signal an error. |
Here is the source code of the
ValidateBuga
sample validator:public class ValidateBuga : Validator {
public ValidateBuga(string elementsToValidate)
: base(elementsToValidate) {
}
public override ValidatorMethodData GetClientMethodData() {
return new ValidatorMethodData(
"buga",
"function(value,element,parameters){return value=='buga';}",
"$.format('" + ErrorMessageFormat + "')"
);
}
public override string GetClientRule(string element) {
return "buga:true";
}
public override string GetClientMessage(string element) {
return string.Format("buga:'{0}'", GetLocalizedErrorMessage(element))
.Replace("'", "\'");
}
protected override void Validate(string element) {
if(Values.ContainsKey(element) == false || (Values[element] ??
string.Empty).Trim() != "buga")
InsertError(element);
}
protected override string GetDefaultErrorMessageFormat() {
return "The field {0} must contain the value \"buga\"";
}
}
Another way to use custom validation is by using the validator
ValidateScriptMethod
. It allows to call a JavaScript function on the client-side and a specific method of the validation set class on the server-side. The custom validation is part of the validation set class and is not usable in multiple validation sets.
The
Validator
Toolkit is a simple and easy way to add client-side and server-side HTML form validation to the new ASP.NET MVC Framework. It is easy to extend the toolkit by adding custom validators. You may use the toolkit until Microsoft provides a solution for HTML form validation.
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