On this post, we will see how to implement client side custom data annotation validation in ASP.NET MVC 3. I wrote about server side custom validation on my
previous post.
There are a few steps that need to be done to implement client side custom validation:
1. Make our custom validation class (see my
previous post for the codes example)
inherits from IClientValidatable and implement its GetClientValidationRules method.
public class SumIntegers : ValidationAttribute, IClientValidatable
{
. . .
public IEnumerable<ModelClientValidationRule> GetClientValidationRules(ModelMetadata metadata,
ControllerContext context)
{
ModelClientValidationRule rule = new ModelClientValidationRule();
//specify a name for the custom validation
rule.ValidationType = "sumintegers";
//pass an error message to be used
rule.ErrorMessage = FormatErrorMessage(metadata.GetDisplayName());
//pass parameter(s) that need to be used when validating
rule.ValidationParameters.Add("sum", _sum);
yield return rule;
}
}
To do this we need to add a reference to
System.Web.Mvc namespace in the class file.
Below is the html generated from the
ModelClientValidationRule properties set above.
<input type="text" value="" name="CSVInput" id="CSVInput"
data-val-sumintegers-sum="20"
data-val-sumintegers="custom error message for CSVInput"
data-val="true" class="text-box single-line valid">
As we can see, the properties are put into
data-val attributes. The attribute
data-val-[validation_name] contains the error message, where
[validation_name] is the
ValidationType property's value we set above. Each passed parameter is put into
data-val-[validation_name]-[parameter_name] attribute.
2. Write a jQuery validation adapter.
The adapter is used to retrieve the
data-val attributes with their values and translate them into a format that jQuery validation can understand. So this adapter is helping us to easily implement our unobtrusive client side validation.
The adapter has several methods that we can use:
-
addBool - creates an adapter for a validation rule that is 'on' or 'off', it requires no additional parameters
-
addSingleVal- creates an adapter for a validation rule that needs to retrieve a single parameter value
-
addMinMax - creates an adapter that maps to a set of validation rules, one that checks for a minimum value and the other checks for a maximum value
-
add - used to create a custom adapter if we cannot use one of the methods above. We can use this if the adapter requires additional parameters or extra setup code.
In our case,
addSingleVal is the best one to use.
// first parameter is the adapter name which should match with the value of ValidationType
// property of ModelClientValidationRule set on the server side
// second parameter is the parameter name added to ValidationParameters property of
// ModelClientValidationRule on the server side
$.validator.unobtrusive.adapters.addSingleVal("sumintegers", "sum");
3. Write the jQuery validator.
We do this through a method called
addMethod that belongs to jQuery validator object.
// first parameter is the validator name which should match with the adapter name
// (which is also the same as the value of ValidationType)
// second parameter is the validation function to be invoked
$.validator.addMethod("sumintegers",
// the validation function's first parameter is the input value, second is the input element
// and the third one is the validation parameter or an array of validation parameters passed
function (inputValue, inputElement, sum) {
var returnValue = true;
if (inputValue) {
var total = 0;
try {
$.each(inputValue.split(','), function () {
total += parseInt(this);
});
}
catch (err) {
returnValue = false;
}
if (total != sum) {
returnValue = false;
}
}
return returnValue;
});
Say we put the scripts from step two and three in a single file called CustomScripts.js. Below is all the scripts that we have written:
/// <reference path="jquery-1.4.4.js" />
/// <reference path="jquery.validate.js" />
/// <reference path="jquery.validate.unobtrusive.js" />
if ($.validator && $.validator.unobtrusive) {
$.validator.unobtrusive.adapters.addSingleVal("sumintegers", "sum");
$.validator.addMethod("sumintegers", function (inputValue, inputElement, sum) {
var returnValue = true;
if (inputValue) {
var total = 0;
try {
$.each(inputValue.split(','), function () {
total += parseInt(this);
});
}
catch (err) {
returnValue = false;
}
if (total != sum) {
returnValue = false;
}
}
return returnValue;
});
}
The first three lines are references put to have IntelliSense works in our codes. Make sure the paths are correct.
4. Finally, include jquery.validate, jquery.validate.unobtrusive and our custom scripts files on the page to render.
<script src="@Url.Content("~/Scripts/jquery.validate.min.js")" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script src="@Url.Content("~/Scripts/jquery.validate.unobtrusive.min.js")" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script src="@Url.Content("~/Scripts/CustomScripts.js")"></script>
Tips: at the first time this validation will fire after the input lost focus but after that it will fire after each key press. This is the default behaviour of other built-in validators. If you are not happy with this and would like the validation to always fire only when the input lost focus then you need to add one of these scripts:
// if only for the specific input field
$(document).ready(function () {
$("input#CSVInput").keyup(function () {
return false;
});
}
// or for all input fields
// never put this inside document ready function
$.validator.setDefaults({
onkeyup: false
})
Reference:
Professional ASP.NET MVC 3 - Jon Galloway, Phil Haack, Brad Wilson, K. Scott Allen