Validator is a simple ruby validation class. You don't use it directly inside your classes like just about every other ruby validation class out there. I chose to implement it in this way so I didn't automatically pollute the namespace of the objects I wanted to validate.
This also solves the problem of validating forms very nicely. Frequently you will have a form that represents many different data objects in your system, and you can pre-validate everything before doing any saving.
Validator is useful for validating the state of any existing ruby object.
object = OpenStruct.new(:email => '[email protected]', :password => 'foobar')
validator = Validation::Validator.new(object)
validator.rule(:email, [:email, :not_empty]) # multiple rules in one line
validator.rule(:password, :not_empty) # a single rule on a line
validator.rule(:password, :length => { :minimum => 3 }) # a rule that takes parameters
if validator.valid?
# save the data somewhere
else
@errors = validator.errors
end
The first paramater can be any message that the object responds to.
If you have a custom rule you need to write, you can create a custom rule class for it:
class MyCustomRule
def error_key
:my_custom_rule
end
def valid_value?(value)
# Logic for determining the validity of the value
end
def params
{}
end
end
A rule class should have the following methods on it:
error_key
a symbol to represent the error. This shows up in the errors hash. Must be an underscored_version of the class namevalid_value?(value)
the beef of the rule. This is where you determine if the value is valid or notparams
the params hash that was passed into the constructor
If you add your custom rule class to the Validation::Rule
namespace, you can reference it using a symbol:
validator.rule(:field, :my_custom_rule) # resolves to Validation::Rule::MyCustomRule
validator.rule(:field, :my_custom_rule => { :param => :value })
Otherwise, just pass in the rule class itself:
validator.rule(:field, MyProject::CustomRule)
validator.rule(:field, MyProject::CustomRule => { :param => :value })
You can also create self-contained validation classes if you don't like the dynamic creation approach:
require 'validation'
require 'validation/rule/not_empty'
class MyFormValidator < Validation::Validator
include Validation
rule :email, :not_empty
end
Now you can use this anywhere in your code:
form_validator = MyFormValidator.new(OpenStruct.new(params))
form_validator.valid?
This project conforms to semver.
Have an improvement? Have an awesome rule you want included? Simple!
- Fork the repository
- Create a branch off of the
master
branch - Write specs for the change
- Add your change
- Submit a pull request to merge against the
master
branch
Don't change any version files or gemspec files in your change.