NAME
HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Validation - validating fields
VERSION
version 0.40001
SYNOPSIS
There are many options for validating fields in FormHandler. Some validation is from field attributes, some from form or field methods, some from 'apply' actions on the fields.
Field attributes for validation
Each individual field may have additional attributes that relate to validation, which are not documented here. See the individual field documentation, linked from HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Fields.
required
Setting the 'required' flag on a field initiates a check for the existence of some value. If the field does not have a value, the 'required' error message is issued.
has_field 'section' => ( required => 1,
messages => { required => 'Please provide a section' } );
Note that a required flag on a subfield -- a field inside a compound field or repeatable field -- does not cause the containing field to be required. You need to set 'required' all the way up, if that's the behavior that you want.
If a field is empty and *not* required, no other field validation will be performed. The form's 'validate' method, however, will always be called.
range_start, range_end
Starting and ending range for number fields.
unique
Attribute used by the DBIC model to check for uniqueness.
Validation methods
validate_method
You can provide a validation method for a field by setting a coderef with 'validate_method'.
has_field 'fox' => ( validate_method => \&check_fox );
sub check_fox {
my $self = shift; # self is the fox field
.....
}
validate_<field_name>
If you provide a 'validate_<field_name>' method it will be automatically used.
has_field 'cat';
sub validate_cat {
my ( $self, $field ) = @_; # self is the form
....
}
If the field name has periods in it, they should be replaced with underscores.
form validate method
A form validation method can be used to do cross-validation or validation checks that need information from more than one field.
sub validate {
my $self = shift;
$self->field('foo')->add_error('....')
if( $self->field('foo')->value eq '..' &&
$self->field('bar')->value eq '..' );
}
field validate method
You can create a custom field to contain a commonly used validation. The validation in a custom field can be done with 'apply' or by using a 'validate' method.
package MyApp::Form::Field::Custom;
use HTML::FormHandler::Moose;
extends 'HTML::FormHandler::Field'; # or a subclass of Field
sub validate {
....
}
Apply Actions: Filters, transformations, and constraints
The actions in the 'apply' array (stored in the 'actions' attribute) will be performed in the order they are specified, allowing fine-grained control over inflation and validation. You can check constraints after transformations and vice versa. You can weave all three types of actions in any order you need.
The two valid 'apply' array elements are 1) Moose types and 2) hashrefs with one of three keys: 'check', 'transform', and 'type'. The hashrefs will usually also have an additional key, 'message', with a string, array or coderef providing an error message, which is localized.
The 'check' key can point to a regex, arrayref of strings, or coderef. The value of the 'transform' key should be a coderef. The value of the 'type' key is a Moose type.
Transformations and coercions are called in an eval to catch the errors. Warnings are trapped in a sigwarn handler.
See also HTML::FormHandler::Field and HTML::FormHandler::Validate. See HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Inflation::Deflation for information on inflation and deflation.
Moose types
Moose types can be used to do both constraints and transformations. If a coercion exists it will be applied, resulting in a transformation. After coercing, the result is checked. You can use type constraints form MooseX::Types> libraries or defined using Moose::Util::TypeConstraints.
FormHandler supplies a library of Moose types in HTML::FormHandler::Types.
use HTML::FormHandler::Types ('NotAllDigits');
has_field 'foo' => ( apply => [ NotAllDigits ] );
You can create your own library of types, too. Or you can create a type constraint in the form:
use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;
subtype 'GreaterThan10'
=> as 'Int'
=> where { $_ > 10 }
=> message { "This number ($_) is not greater than 10" };
has_field 'text_gt' => ( apply=> [ 'GreaterThan10' ] );
Moose types can also be used for their coercions to do transformations.
subtype 'MyInt'
=> as 'Int';
coerce 'MyInt'
=> from 'MyStr'
=> via { return $1 if /(\d+)/ };
You can also use the 'type' keyword with a Moose type if you want to change the message:
has_field 'text_gt' => ( apply => [
{ type => 'GreaterThan10',
message => 'Number is too small' } ] );
transform
A 'transform' changes the format of a field's value, and does not need a message. It takes a coderef.
has_field 'another_field' => (
apply => [ { transform => sub{ sprintf '<%.1g>', $_[0] } } ]
);
Note that transformed values are not displayed in the HTML form unless the 'fif_from_value' flag is set. The transformed values are saved to the database or returned in $form->value
.
'check' regex
Checks that field value matches the regex.
has_field 'some_field' => (
apply => [ { check => qr/aaa/, message => 'Must contain aaa' } ],
);
You can use regex libraries like Regexp::Common too:
use Regexp::Common ('URI');
...
has_field 'my_url' => ( apply => [
{ check => qr/$RE{URI}{HTTP}/,
message => 'Invalid URL' } ] );
'check' arrayref (matches)
Provide an arrayref of strings to match against.
has_field 'set_error' => (
apply => [
{ check => [ 'abc', 'bbb' ],
message => 'Must be "aaa" or "bbb"' }
]
);
'check' coderef
Provide a validation function to check. A 'check' coderef will be passed the current value of the field and should return true or false. Note that the field is passed in as the second argument, to allow simple functions to work properly.
has_field 'callback_pass' => (
apply => [
{ check => \&check_callback_pass,
message => 'Must contain number greater than 10', }
]
);
sub check_callback_pass {
my ( $value, $field ) = @_;
if( $value =~ /(\d+)/ ) {
return $1 > 10;
}
}
message
The message for the above checks can also be a an arrayref or coderef. The arrayref is useful for localized messages. You can also provide error messages for Moose types.
has_field 'message_sub' => (
apply => [
{ check => [ 'abc' ],
message => \&err_message }
]
);
sub err_message {
my ($value, $field ) = @_;
return $field->name . ': Must be "abc"';
}
has_field 'message_arrayref' => (
apply => [ { check => qr/aaa/,
message => ['Must contain [_1]', 'aaa'] } ],
);
has_field 'my_moose_type_field' => (
apply => [ { type => SomeType,
message => 'Invalid ...' } ] );
actions in a field class
To declare actions inside a field class use HTML::FormHandler::Moose and 'apply' sugar:
package MyApp::Field::Test;
use HTML::FormHandler::Moose;
extends 'HTML::FormHandler::Field;
apply [ 'SomeConstraint', { check => ..., message => .... } ];
1;
Actions specified with apply are cumulative. Actions may be specified in field classes and additional actions added in the 'has_field' declaration.
You can see examples of field classes with 'apply' actions in the source for HTML::FormHandler::Field::Money and HTML::FormHandler::Field::Email, and in t/constraints.t.
Dependency
The 'dependency' attribute is an array of arrays of field names. During validation, if any field in a given group contains the pattern /\S/ (non-blank), the 'required' flag is set for all of the fields in the group.
has '+dependency' => ( default => sub {
[
['address', 'city', 'state', 'zip'],
['cc_no', 'cc_expires'],
],
},
);
AUTHOR
FormHandler Contributors - see HTML::FormHandler
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Gerda Shank.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.