- Introduction & documentation
- Installation and Usage
- Motivation
- Build and Test
- Options
- Validation Rules
- Error Messages
Jedi Validate is a lightweight form validation component.
This is a JS class and you can create a new instance by passing in a DOM element and an options object.
// npm install jedi-validate
import JediValidate from 'jedi-validate';
const JediValidate = new JediValidate(document.querySelector('#form5'));
By default, the form will be sent via ajax with the parameters which were set in HTML.
Because it provides a strict json format for interaction, you can send a form in many different ways:
- serialized
- as a JSON object
- as FormData
But the server response always has one structure. It is easier to implement.
If you would like to build the source code, run tests, or contribute, then first fork or clone this repo onto your local machine. Ensure NodeJS and npm are installed. Check in a terminal with node -v
and npm -v
.
To install project dependencies first run,
npm install
To build the source and watch for changes in the terminal run,
npm run build
To bundle the source and serve it to localhost:4000
run,
npm run dev
This will open a webpack local server where you can navigate to the desired directory or resource. The test page is located in example/bootstrap.html
The tests are not yet complete and runtime errors will occur when attempting to run the tests in the console or through the test browser.
There are three types of options:
- Default component options
- Form attributes such as action or method
- Initialization options
{
ajax: {
url: null,
enctype: 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded',
sendType: 'serialize', // 'formData', 'json'
method: 'GET'
},
rules: {},
messages: {},
containers: {
parent: 'form-group',
message: 'help-block',
baseMessage: 'base-error'
},
states: {
error: 'error',
valid: 'valid',
pristine: 'pristine',
dirty: 'dirty'
},
callbacks: {
success: function () {
},
error: function () {
}
},
clean: true,
redirect: true
}
Under the ajax option we define how to send the form.
It can be null
if we do not want the form to be sent,
or it can be an object with the following options:
default: null
Can be overridden by the action
form attribute or init options.
default: 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'
Can be overridden by the enctype
form attribute, init options, or sendType
.
default: 'GET'
Can be overridden by the method
form attribute or init options.
default: 'serialize'
You can encode and send the data in three different ways. Valid options are:
'formData'
- send form as FormData.'Content-type'
to'multipart/form-data'
'json'
- send form as a JSON object. Set'Content-type'
to'application/json; charset=utf-8'
'serialize'
- send form as a regular request. Set'Content-type'
to'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'
Files can only be sent using 'formData' encoding.
name=111&phone=222222222&email=wow%40wow.com
-----------------------------678106150613000712676411464
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="name"
111
-----------------------------678106150613000712676411464
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="phone"
222222222
-----------------------------678106150613000712676411464
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="email"
...
{"name":"111","phone":"222222222","email":"[email protected]","file":"index.html"}
Rules used to validate input. Each form element will be matched by the 'name' attribute with a corresponding rule, if one exists. If no rule exists, then no validation will occur.
Rules are not defined by default, but they can be set via attributes, or classes in HTML, or in the init options.
- required : boolean
- regexp : RegExp
- email : boolean
- tel : boolean
- url : boolean
- filesize: number
- extension: string
These attributes can be used
- type - email, tel or url (regexp will be used for each type)
- pattern - regexp with attribute value
- required - check input for empty value
Example:
<input id="name" type="text" name="name" required class="required">
<input id="email" type="email" name="email" class="required">
- type="email" or class="email" to validate as email
- required or class="required" to validate as a required field
You can set your own rules using the addMethod
function:
JediValidate.addMethod('methodName', function (value, options) {
return true // true if valid
}, 'Error message');
Add rules as part of your options object when initializing:
const validator = new JediValidate(formWrapper, {
rules: {
name: {
required: true
},
email: {
email: true
},
phone: {
regexp: /^([\+]+)*[0-9\x20\x28\x29\-]{5,20}$/
},
file: {
filesize: 10000,
extension: "html|css|txt"
}
file2: {
filesize: [10000, "two-files-checkbox"], // check only if checkbox checked
extension: ["html|css|txt", "two-files-checkbox"], // without recollect by default
another: ['param', function(oldData) {
const newData = validator.collect('two-files-checkbox'); // manual data recollect for concrete field
return !!newData['two-files-checkbox'];
}];
}
}
});
You can recollect data from the entire form or just by input name. The method returns new data.
validator.collect(); // all form
validator.collect('two-files-checkbox'); // one field
You can define your own error messages in case validation fails. In case a form element fails validation, the message corresponding to the element's 'name' attribute will apply.
messages: {
phone: {
regexp: "Invalid phone number"
},
file: {
filesize: "File is too big"
}
},