ng-remote-validate
v0.6.5
Published
ngRemoveValidate makes it easy for you to validate form fields agents data from your server. For example, a sign up form may need to check if the email entered is already registered before submitting the form.
Downloads
638
Readme
#Ajax Validation for Angularjs#
ngRemoveValidate makes it easy for you to validate form fields agents data from your server. For example, a sign up form may need to check if the email entered is already registered before submitting the form.
Features:
Drop in solution for Ajax validation of any text or password input
Works with Angulars built in validation and can be accessed at
formName.inputName.$error.ngRemoteValidate
Throttles server requests (default 400ms) and can be set with
ng-remote-throttle="550"
Allows HTTP method definition (default POST) with
ng-remote-method="GET"
##Getting started - Example##
Adding ngRemoteValidate to your project
bower install ng-remote-validate
OR
Grab either the minified version or the standard source from the release folder and add it to your project.
<script type="text/javascript" src="../your/path/ngRemoteValidate.js"></script>
Include ngRemoteValidate in you Angular app
var app = angular.module( 'myApp', [ 'remoteValidation' ] );
Using it in your forms
This will be a basic change password form that requires the user to enter their current password as well as the new password.
<h3>Change password</h3>
<form name="changePasswordForm">
<label for="currentPassword">Current</label>
<input type="password"
name="currentPassword"
placeholder="Current password"
ng-model="password.current"
ng-remote-validate="/customer/validpassword"
required>
<span ng-show="changePasswordForm.currentPassword.$error.required && changePasswordForm.confirmPassword.$dirty">
Required
</span>
<span ng-show="changePasswordForm.currentPassword.$error.ngRemoteValidate">
Incorrect current password. Please enter your current account password.
</span>
<label for="newPassword">New</label>
<input type="password"
name="newPassword"
placeholder="New password"
ng-model="password.new"
required>
<label for="confirmPassword">Confirm</label>
<input ng-disabled=""
type="password"
name="confirmPassword"
placeholder="Confirm password"
ng-model="password.confirm"
ng-match="password.new"
required>
<span ng-show="changePasswordForm.confirmPassword.$error.match">
New and confirm do not match
</span>
<div>
<button type="submit"
ng-disabled="changePasswordForm.$invalid || changePasswordForm.$pending"
ng-click="changePassword(password.new, changePasswordForm);reset();">
Change password
</button>
</div>
</form>
##Options## There are a few defaults that can be overwritten with options. They are:
ng-remote-validate
takes a string, an Array of string i.e.ng-remote-validate="/url/one"
orng-remote-validate="[ '/url/one', '/url/two' ]"
, or an Object of string/validation pairs i.e.ng-remote-validate="{ '/url/validate/unique' : 'unique', '/url/validate/blacklist' : 'blacklisted'}"
, which would respectively setformName.inputName.$error.unique
andformName.inputName.$error.blacklisted
in addition to the catch-allformName.inputName.$error.ngRemoteValidate
.ng-remote-throttle
(default: 400) Users inactivity length before sending validation requests to the serverng-remote-method
(default: 'POST') Type of request you would like to send
Example using all
<input type="password"
name="currentPassword"
placeholder="Current password"
ng-model="password.current"
ng-remote-validate="/customer/validpassword"
ng-remote-throttle="550"
ng-remote-method="GET"
required>
<input type="text"
name="email"
placeholder="Email address"
ng-model="email"
ng-remote-validate="[ '/customer/email-registered', '/customer/email-restricted' ]"
ng-remote-throttle="800"
ng-remote-method="POST"
required>
ngRemote will add a $pending
property on your model and the containing form. You can use these to show loading animations and to disable the form submit button:
<span class="message" ng-show="myForm.inputName.$pending">validating...</span>
...
<button type="submit" ng-disabled="myForm.$invalid || myForm.$pending" ng-click="...">Go!</button>
##Server side##
Data sent to the server
By default, ngRemoteValidate will send a simple JSON string to the server formatted like so:
{ "value": "inputValue" }
If you would like to change what data is sent to the server, you can create an inputNameSetArgs
callback on your controllers $scope
. This callback should return the data you want sent to the server.
$scope.currentPasswordSetArgs = function( val, el, attrs, ngModel ) {
return { value: val, otherData: attrs.otherData };
};
Server response
ngRemoteValidate wants a specific JSON response from your servers. The response should look as follows:
{
isValid: bool, //Is the value received valid
value: 'myPassword!' //value received from server
}