/!\ Version 2.0.0 is now dependency-free. If you're working with react-intl, look at the i18n and react-intl section.
Simple validations with redux-form. Heavily inspired by the rails validations.
Installation | Example | Documentation
npm install redux-form-validators
Note: For internationalization purposes, this package is compatible with react-intl.
To run the example project you need to clone the repo and run npm i -d && npm start
.
Then go to http://localhost:3003/
If you're already familiar with redux-form it should be pretty straight forward:
This example shows you how to set a field level validation with redux-form.
Thanks to redux-form-validators
, you'll only have to pass the validators needed:
import { required, email } from 'redux-form-validators'
<Field name="email" type="email" label="Email" component={renderField}
validate={[required(), email()]} />
That's it! =)
Now let's replace the validate function of this redux-form example:
validations = {
username: [required(), length({ max: 15 })],
email: [required(), email()],
age: [
required(),
numericality({ int: true }),
numericality({ '>=': 18, msg: "You must be at least 18 years old" })
]
}
// Reusable with any other form
validate = (values) => {
const errors = {}
for (let field in validations) {
let value = values[field]
errors[field] = validations[field].map(validateField => {
return validateField(value, values)
}).find(x => x)
}
return errors
}
Validators
- required / presence
- numericality
- date
- length
- confirmation
- format
- acceptance
- inclusion
- exclusion
- absence
- url
More
- i18n and react-intl
- adding a validator
- default options
- common validation options
- conditional validation
- date helpers
Validates that the specified value is not empty. It uses the trim()
method to check if the value is a blank string, that is, a string that is either empty or consists of whitespace.
<Field name="login" type="text" label="Login" component={renderField}
validate={required()} />
The default error message is "is required". You can also pass custom message via the message option.
Validates that the specified value is a valid email address. It uses the email.REG_EMAIL
regexp to check the value.
<Field name="email" type="email" label="Email" component={renderField}
validate={email()} />
The default error message is "is not a valid email".
Validates that your value have only numeric values. By default, it will match an optional sign followed by an integral or floating point number. To specify that only integral numbers are allowed set int
(or integer
) to true.
<Field name="lat" type="text" label="Latitude" component={renderField}
validate={numericality()} />
Besides int
, this validator also accepts the following options to add constraints to acceptable values:
>
(orgreaterThan
) - Specifies the value must be greater than the supplied value. The default error message for this option is "must be greater than ${count}".>=
(orgreaterThanOrEqualTo
) - Specifies the value must be greater than or equal to the supplied value. The default error message for this option is "must be greater than or equal to ${count}".=
(orequalTo
) - Specifies the value must be equal to the supplied value. The default error message for this option is "must be equal to ${count}".!=
(orotherThan
) - Specifies the value must be other than the supplied value. The default error message for this option is "must be other than 4{count}".<
(orlessThan
) - Specifies the value must be less than the supplied value. The default error message for this option is "must be less than ${count}".<=
(orlessThanOrEqualTo
) - Specifies the value must be less than or equal to the supplied value. The default error message for this option is "must be less than or equal to ${count}".odd
- Specifies the value must be an odd number if set to true. The default error message for this option is "must be odd".even
- Specifies the value must be an even number if set to true. The default error message for this option is "must be even".
Examples
numericality({ int: true })
numericality({ '>': 6 })
numericality({ '>': 6, '<=': 20 })
numericality({ int: true, odd: true })
The default error message is "is not a number".
Very simple date validator. Limited to year, month and day validation (but it should mostly match your needs). Feel free to use a date manipulation lib to write a better date validator (see add a validator).
<Field name="date" type="text" label="Date" component={renderField}
validate={date({ format: 'mm/dd/yyyy' })} />
Accepts the following options:
format
- Specifies the format that should match the date string. Accepts only the current flags:y
,m
&d
. The number of flags used represents the number of digits expected (e.g.yyyy
expects 4 digits whileyy
expects 2). Format examples:mm/dd/yyyy
,dd/mm/yyyy
,yyyy-mm-dd
,mm/dd/yy
,yyyy/mm
,mm/dd
...ymd
- Allows you to customize the format, to be more readable in case you're using i18n. For instance, you could use{ format: 'jj/mm/aaaa', ymd: 'amj' }
for a French format.
(See default options to set format
and ymd
globally)
And the comparable options:
- '=', '>', '>=', '<', '<='. All of these options accept either a Date object, a timestamp, or a function (which returns a Date or a timestamp). To avoid syncing issues, don't pass
new Date()
directly but wrap it in a function or just pass the string'today'
. Note that these options are only available if these flags are present:y
+m
+d
ORy
+m
OR justy
)
Examples
date({ format: 'mm/dd/yyyy' })
date({ format: 'mm/yyyy' })
date({ format: 'YYYY-MM-DD', ymd: 'YMD' })
date({ format: 'dd/mm/yyyy', '<': new Date(2020, 0, 1), '>=': new Date(1980, 0, 1) })
date({ format: 'mm/dd/yyyy', '>': 'today', msg: "must be in the future" })
date({ format: 'mm/dd/yyyy', '<=': twentyYearsAgo, msg: "you must be at least 20 years old" })
function twentyYearsAgo () {
let d = new Date()
d.setFullYear(d.getFullYear() - 20)
return d
}
The default error messages are:
- "expected format: {format}"
- "is not a valid date" (e.g. Feb 29 2017)
- "should be {op} {date}" (e.g. 'should be > 01/14/2017')
See also parseDate & formatDate
Validates the length of the value. It provides a variety of options, so you can specify length constraints in different ways:
<Field name="name" type="text" label="Name" component={renderField}
validate={length({ min: 2 })} />
The possible length constraint options are:
min
(orminimum
) - The value cannot have less than the specified length.max
(ormaximum
) - The value cannot have more than the specified length.in
(orwithin
) - The value length must be included in a given interval. The value for this option must be an array.is
(or=
) - The value length must be equal to the given value.
Examples
length({ minimum: 2 })
length({ min: 2, max: 8 })
length({ in: [2, 8] })
length({ is: 6 })
The default error messages depend on the type of length validation being performed. You can personalize these messages using the wrongLength
, tooLong
, and tooShort
options and ${count} as a placeholder for the number corresponding to the length constraint being used. You can still use the msg
(or message
) option to specify an error message (don't forget to pluralize it).
You should use this validator when you have two text fields that should receive exactly the same content. For example, you may want to confirm an email address or a password.
<Field name="pass" type="password" label="Password" component={renderField} />
<Field name="confirmation" type="password" label="Confirmation" component={renderField}
validate={confirmation({ field: 'pass', fieldLabel: 'Password' })} />
There is also a caseSensitive
option that you can use to define whether the confirmation constraint will be case sensitive or not. This option defaults to true (see default options).
Examples
confirmation({ field: 'email' })
confirmation({ field: 'email', fieldLabel: 'Email' })
confirmation({ field: 'email', fieldLabel: 'Email', caseSensitive: false })
The default error message for this validator is "doesn't match ${fieldLabel || field}".
Validates the value by testing whether it match a given regular expression, which is specified using the with
option.
<Field name="legacyCode" type="text" label="Legacy Code" component={renderField}
validate={format({ with: /^[a-z]+$/i, message: "Only allows letters" })} />
Alternatively, you can require that the specified value does not match the regular expression by using the without
option.
Examples
format({ with: /[a-z0-9]/i })
format({ without: /#@%&\!\:\?\+\=/i }) // doesn't allow these chars: '#@%&!:?+='
The default error message is "is invalid".
This method validates that a checkbox on the user interface was checked. This is typically used when the user needs to agree to your application's terms of service, confirm that some text is read, or any similar concept.
<Field name="terms" type="checkbox" label="I accept the terms of service"
component={renderField} validate={acceptance()} />
It can also receive an accept
option, which determines the allowed values that will be considered as accepted. It defaults to ['1', 'true'] (see default options).
Examples
acceptance({ accept: 'yes' })
acceptance({ accept: ['TRUE', 'accepted'] })
The default error message for this validator is "must be accepted".
Validates that the value is included in a given set.
<Field name="size" type="text" label="Size" component={renderField}
validate={inclusion({ in: ['small', 'medium', 'large'] })} />
The inclusion validator has an option in
that receives the set of values that will be accepted. The in
option has an alias called within
that you can use for the same purpose, if you'd like to.
There is also a caseSensitive
option that you can use to define whether the match will be case sensitive or not. This option defaults to true (see default options).
Examples
inclusion({ in: [1, 2, 3, 4] })
inclusion({ in: ['blue', 'white', 'red'], caseSensitive: false })
The default error message for this validator is "is not included in the list".
Validates that the value is not included in a given set.
<Field name="subdomain" type="text" label="Subdomain" component={renderField}
validate={exclusion({ in: ['www', 'us', 'ca'] })} />
The exclusion validator has an option in
that receives the set of values that will not be accepted for the validated attributes. The in
option has an alias called within
that you can use for the same purpose, if you'd like to.
There is also a caseSensitive
option that you can use to define whether the match will be case sensitive or not. This option defaults to true (see default options).
Examples
exclusion({ in: [1, 2, 3, 4] })
exclusion({ in: ['apple', 'banana'], caseSensitive: false })
The default error message is "${value} is reserved".
Validates that the specified value are absent. It uses the trim()
method to check if the value is not a blank string, that is, a string that is either empty or consists of whitespace.
<Field name="name" type="text" label="Name" component={renderField}
validate={absence()} />
The default error message is "must be blank".
Validates that the specified value is a valid URL. It uses the url.REG_URL
regexp to check the value.
<Field name="url" type="text" label="URL" component={renderField}
validate={url()} />
The url validator has an option protocol
(or its alias protocols
) that receives the set of protocols that will be accepted. This option default to ['http', 'https'] (see default options).
Examples
url({ protocol: 'http' })
url({ protocol: 'ftp' })
url({ protocols: ['http', 'https'] })
The default error message is "is not a valid URL".
Note: As of version 2.0.0, the default protocol value is now: ['http', 'https'] ('ftp' was previously included)
By default, all errors messages are in english and are pluralized if needed (basic support) but you can use react-intl to support different languages. All you need to do is to insert the following lines:
import Validators from 'redux-form-validators'
import { FormattedMessage } from 'react-intl'
Validators.formatMessage = function(msg) {
return <FormattedMessage {...(msg.props || msg)} />
}
Note: You can also implement your own i18n/pluralization module by overriding
Validators.formatMessage
. The first argument is a javascript object compatible with react-intl:
{
id: "form.errors.greaterThan",
defaultMessage: "must be greater than {count, number}",
values: { count: 10 }
}
And if you're using babel-plugin-react-intl to extract your application messages, you'll need to add a new plugin entry in your webpack config (example):
["react-intl", {
"messagesDir": ...,
"languages": ...,
// /!\ it's important to keep a relative path here
"moduleSourceName": "./redux-form-validators"
}
redux-form-validators comes with default options:
{
allowBlank: false,
urlProtocols: ['http', 'https'],
dateFormat: 'yyyy-mm-dd',
dateYmd: 'ymd',
accept: ['1', 'true'],
caseSensitive: true // confirmation, inclusion, exclusion
};
But you can easily change them:
import Validators from 'redux-validators'
// Override dateFormat & urlProtocols
Object.assign(Validators.defaultOptions, {
dateFormat: 'mm/dd/yyyy',
urlProtocols: ['http', 'https', 'ftp']
})
This option will let validation pass if the value is blank, like an empty string for example.
<Field name="name" type="text" label="Name" component={renderField}
validate={length({ '=': 5, allowBlank: true })} />
Not available for: required, absence, acceptance & confirmation.
Note: If you're already using the required validator you don't need to care about the allowBlank option.
As you've already seen, the message
option lets you specify the message that will be added to the errors collection when validation fails. When this option is not used, redux-form-validators
will use the respective default error message for each validator. The message
option accepts a String, a Hash or a FormattedMessage.
format({ with: /^[a-z]+$/i, message: 'Letters only' })
format({ with: /^[a-z]+$/i, message: { defaultMessage: 'Letters only' } })
// I18n with react-intl
format({ with: /^[a-z]+$/i, message: { id: 'form.errors.alpha',
defaultMessage: 'Letters only' } })
format({ with: /^[a-z]+$/i, message: <FormattedMessage id="form.errors.alpha"
defaultMessage="Letters only"/> })
// Version >= 2.1.0 only
length({ msg: { tooShort: 'too short', tooLong: 'too long' }, in: [2, 8] })
length({ msg: { tooShort: { id: 'errors.length.min',
defaultMessage: 'too short' } }, min: 2 })
length({ msg: { tooShort: <FormattedMessage id="errors.length.min"
defaultMessage="too short"/> }, min: 2 })
length({ msg: { tooShort: 'min {count, number} characters' }, min: 2, max: 8 })
//=> tooLong message remains the default message
Note: As of version 2.1.0, you can also override just certain messages, and/or use interpolation.
Note: all messages are internally converted into javascript objects (see i18n and react-intl), so if you pass a FormattedMessage as an argument, don't expect it to be returned as it.
Finally, it's possible to associate if
and unless
with a function which will be called. Using a function gives you the ability to write an inline condition instead of a separate method. This option is best suited for one-liners.
<Field name="surname" type="text" label="Surname" component={renderField}
validate={presence({ if: (values, value) => { return '' !== values.name } })} />
const alphaValidator = addValidator({
defaultMessage: "Letters only",
validator: function(options, value, allValues) {
return (options.lowerCase ? /^[a-z]+$/ : /^[a-z]+$/i).test(value)
}
})
<Field name="name" type="text" label="Name" component={renderField}
validate={alphaValidator({ lowerCase: true, allowBlank: true })} />
// Version >= 2.0.0 only
const digitValidator = addValidator({
validator: function(options, value, allValues) {
if (options.digits !== value.replace(/[^0-9]/g, '').length) {
return {
id: "form.errors.custom"
defaultMessage: "must contain {count, number} {count, plural, one {digit} other {digits}})"
values: { count: options.digits }
}
}
}
})
<Field name="digits" type="text" label="4 digits" component={renderField}
validate={digitValidator({ digits: 4 })} />
defaultMessage
accepts a String, a Hash or a FormattedMessage. See the message
option. Its default value is is not valid
.
Note: As of version 2.0.0, you can now return a message directly if invalid (allowing things like pluralization). For backward compatibility, if you return a boolean, the validator will return the defaultMessage if invalid.
Note: you'll still be able to use the common options (
message
&allowBlank
) and the conditional validation (if
andunless
).
parser used to validate dates.
Signature: parseDate(dateString, format[, ymd])
Examples:
import { date } from 'redux-form-validators'
let parseDate = date.parseDate
parseDate('12/31/2017', 'mm/dd/yyyy') => new Date(2017, 11, 31)
parseDate('2016/01', 'yyyy/mm')) => new Date(2016, 1, 1)
parseDate('12/01', 'mm/dd')) => new Date(1970, 11, 1)
// Custom ymd
parseDate('12/31/2017', 'mm/jj/aaaa', 'amj') => new Date(2017, 11, 31)
// Error
parseDate('12122016', 'mm/dd/yyyy') => Invalid date
formatter used to display dates.
Signature: formatDate(date, format[, ymd])
Examples:
import { date } from 'redux-form-validators'
let formatDate = date.formatDate
formatDate(new Date(2017, 11, 31), 'mm/dd/yyyy') => '12/31/2017'
formatDate(new Date(2016, 1, 1), 'yyyy/mm')) => '2016/01'
formatDate(new Date(1970, 11, 1), 'mm/dd')) => '12/01'
// Custom ymd
formatDate(new Date(2017, 11, 31), 'mm/jj/aaaa', 'amj') => '12/31/2017'
// Error
formatDate(new Date(NaN), 'mm/dd/yyyy') => null
formatDate(null, 'mm/dd/yyyy') => null
formatDate({}, 'mm/dd/yyyy') => null