form_validation 3.1.1+6 form_validation: ^3.1.1+6 copied to clipboard
Validators that can be used directly via code or constructed from JSON to provide dynamic validation.
Table of Contents
form_validation #
Form validators that can be used directly via code or constructed from JSON to provide more dynamic validation.
Using the library #
Add the repo to your Flutter pubspec.yaml
file.
dependencies:
form_validation: <<version>>
Then run...
flutter packages get
Validators #
The library provides a set of built-in validators while also providing a mechanism for applications to provide their own validators. All the built-in validators are able to be deserialized via JSON. They all expect an attribute of type
to match a specific value when being desearialized.
Note: With the sole exception of RequiredValidator
, all built in validators will pass on null
or empty values.
Class | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CurrencyValidator |
currency |
Ensures the value is a valid currency |
EmailValidator |
email |
Ensures the value is a validly formatted email address |
MaxLengthValidator |
max_length |
Ensures the value contains no more than a set number of characters |
MaxNumberValidator |
max_number |
Ensures the value is no larger than a given number |
MinLengthValidator |
min_length |
Ensures the value contains no fewer than a set number of characters |
MinNumberValidator |
min_number |
Ensures the value is no smaller than a given number |
NumberValidator |
number |
Ensures the value is a valid number |
PhoneNumberValidator |
phone_number |
Ensures the value is a validly formatted phone number |
RequiredValidator |
required |
Ensures the value is not null , empty, nor white space only |
Validation Messages / Translations #
The library provides a default set of English error messages for each validator's error message. This library provides a class named [FormValidationTranslations] that has a values
map. In it is the default strings to use. Update that map when a different language should be used. Below are the available keys.
Key | Parameters | Description |
---|---|---|
form_validation_currency |
label |
Used when an invalid currency value is detected |
form_validation_currency_positive |
label |
Used when a valid, but negative, currency value is detected |
form_validation_email |
label |
Used when an invalid email is detected |
form_validation_max_length |
label , length |
Used when a value contains more characters than length |
form_validation_max_number |
label , number |
Used when a value is larger than number |
form_validation_min_length |
label , length |
Used when a value contains fewer characters than length |
form_validation_min_number |
label , number |
Used when a value is smaller than number |
form_validation_number |
label |
Used when a number is expected but not detected |
form_validation_number_decimal |
label |
Used when a number is detected, but not allowed to be a decimal |
form_validation_phone_number |
label |
Used when an invalid phone number is detected |
form_validation_required |
label |
Used when a value is required, but detected as null , empty, or all white space |
JSON Support #
The Validator
class can be used to decode a list of child ValueValidator
entries. Each of the built-in validators can be deserialized via JSON. In addition to being able to deserialize from JSON, each of the built-in validators supports serializing to a JSON compatible map via toJson
or an actual JSON encoded string via toJsonString
.
The overall struction needs to be:
{
"validators": [
// One or more of the JSON objects shown below
]
}
CurrencyValidator #
{
"allowNegative": <bool>, // Default: true; states whether negative values are allowed or not
"type": "currency"
}
EmailValidator #
{
"type": "email"
}
MaxLengthValidator #
{
"length": <int>, // The maximum length the value may be
"type": "max_length"
}
MaxNumberValidator #
{
"length": <int>, // The maximum number the value may be
"type": "max_number"
}
MinLengthValidator #
{
"length": <int>, // The minimum length the value may be
"type": "min_length"
}
MinNumberValidator #
{
"length": <int>, // The minimum number the value may be
"type": "min_number"
}
NumberValidator #
{
"type": "number"
}
PhoneNumberValidator #
{
"type": "phone_number"
}
RequiredValidator #
{
"type": "required"
}
Custom Validators #
The Validator
supports custom validators being added either directly through classes extending the ValueValidator
abstract class and passing them in via the constructor. Alternatively, an application may register a validator type with Validator
using the registerCustomValidatorBuilder
function.
Example #
class MyCustomValidator extends ValueValidator {
static const type = 'my_custom_validator';
static MyCustomValidator fromDynamic(dynamic map) {
MyCustomValidator({
// initialization args go here
});
MyCustomValidator result;
if (map != null) {
assert(map['type'] == type);
result = MyCustomValidator(
// Do additional JSON conversion here
)
})
return result;
}
Map<String, dynamic> toJson() => {
// add additional attributes here
"type": type,
}
String validate({
@required BuildContext context,
@required String label,
@required String value,
}) {
String error;
// In general, validators should pass if the value is empty. Combine
// validators with the RequiredValidator to ensure a value is non-empty.
if (value?.isNotEmpty == true) {
// Do processing to determine if the value is valid or not
}
return error;
}
}
...
void main() {
Validator.registerCustomValidatorBuilder(
MyCustomValidator.type,
MyCustomValidator.fromDynamic,
);
// start app
}
...
var jsonStr = '''
{
"validators": [{
"type": "required"
}, {
"type": "my_custom_validator"
}]
}
'''
// This will create a validation chain with the RequiredValidator as well as the
// MyCustomValidator defined above
var validator = Validator.fromDynamic(json.decode(jsonStr));