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Validate.js


A barebones jQuery validation plugin.

Fully configurable and extendable, it can be used in any size project.

Have a look at index.html for a demo.


Usage

Basic

The plugin is designed to be used as a jQuery function, so call it like so:

$('#form').validate(settings);

To return the $.validate object:

var $validate = $('#form').data('validate');

To add rules to your elements, simple add in the data attribute data-validate:

<input type="text" name="email" data-validate="required|email">

Rules should be separated with a pipe (|), and parameters for various rules should be enclosed in square brackets: data-validate="min[2]|max[100]"

The plugin will automatically be called when the form is submitted.

Advanced

You can also use the plugin independently, by calling it like so:

var $validate = new $.validate(settings, form);

Documentation

Rules

These rules can be used in the data-validate attribute. Please note the camelCasing!

required
Returns true if a value is entered

alpha
Only allow letters

numeric
Only allow numbers

alphanumeric
Only allow letter/numbers

url
Only allow valid URLs (must include https/http/ftp)

email
Only allow valid emails

groupRequired
Check at least 1 checkbox/radio has been selected. This must be placed on the container of the inputs

groupMin[X]
Check if at least X checkboxes/radios have been checked. This must be placed on the container of the inputs

groupMax[X]
Check if at most X checkboxes/radios have been checked. This must be placed on the container of the inputs

regExp[name]
Check the value against a saved regual expression. (i.e. alpha, email etc.)

customRegExp[value,modifiers]
Check the value against a custom regular expression without the wrapping /. e.g., [A-Z,igm]

max[X]
Only allow numbers that are equal to or below X

min[X]
Only allow numbers that are equal to or above X

minLength[X]
Only allow values that are equal to or less than length X

maxLength[X]
Only allow values that are equal to or more than length X

Options

The jQuery plugin has 1 optional parameter, the options object, where as if you call the class directly, you have two optional parameters, the options object and a form element.

Settings object

debug false
If set to true, the form will not submit on success.

autoDetect false
If set to true, html5 input types will automatically be detected (i.e. email)

visibleOnly true
If set to true, only visible elements will be checked

beforeSubmit function(){}
Function to call before the form is checked

singleError function($field, failedRules){}
Function to call if an error is found. This is called per field. So if two fields have errors, this will be called twice.

overallError function($form, failedFields){}
Function to be called if the form has errors

singleSuccess function($field, rules){}
Function to be called if a field has validated

overallSuccess function($form){}
Function to be called if the form has passed validation

regExp { alpha : ..., numeric : ..., alphanumeric : ..., url : ..., email : ... }
Object of RegExps used to validate fields. This means you can easily replace existing ones or add your own.

Form

You can optionally pass in a form element if you are using the class method. This means you don't have to reference it later if you're using the public methods (as shown below).


Public Methods

checkField ($field)
Validates the field, returns true/false.

checkValue ($field, rules)
Validates a field based on the array of rules you pass in. Useful if you want to add new rules as you go.

fieldsToCheck ($form)
Returns a jQuery selection of fields the form checks when validating. Pass in a form to check, or leave blank to use the currently set form.

checkRequired ($field)
Checks if the field has a value.

checkRequiredCheckbox ($field)
Checks if a checkbox has been selected. This is done automatically when auto processing the rules, and is included here just for completion.

checkGroupRequired ($inputs)
Checks if at least one input (radio/checkbox) has been selected. $inputs is the container of the inputs.

checkGroupMax ($inputs, max)
Checks if a max amount of inputs (radio/checkbox) have been selected. $inputs is the container of the inputs.

checkGroupMin ($inputs, min)
Checks if a min amount of inputs (radio/checkbox) have been selected. $inputs is the container of the inputs.

checkRegExp ($field, regExp)
Checks if the value matches a predefined regular expression. (i.e. alpha, email etc.)

checkCustomRegExp ($field, regExp, modifiers)
Checks if the value matches the custom regular expression.

checkMax ($field, max)
Checks if a number is equal to or smaller than the max value.

checkMin ($field, min)
Checks if a number is equal to or larger than the min value.

checkMinLength ($field, min)
Checks if the value is equal to or larger than the max length.

checkMaxLength ($field, min)
Checks if the value is equal to or smaller than the mix length.


Custom Validation

Adding custom validation is easy! There are two ways you can add a new rule.

1: Add a new regExp rule when passing the settings object:

var settings = {
    regExp    : {
        customRule : /[124]{1,2}/
    }
};

Then reference it in your data attribute:

<input type="text" name="custom" data-validate="customRule">

2: You can add a completely new check method if you need something more advanced. The method must be prefixed with check, and be in camelCase.

First, get the validate object:

var $validate = $('#form').data('validate');

Add your new method:

$validate.checkCustomRule = function($field, arg1){
    return $field.val() == arg1;
};

Now reference it:

<input type="text" name="custom" data-validate="customRule[matchme]">

Any parameters you specify will automatically be passed in, so customRule[x,y,z] will equate to:

$validate.checkCustomRule($field, x, y, z);

The field to validate will always be the first parameter passed in.

For some examples, see the custom validation gist.

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A barebones jQuery validation plugin

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