React Form Validator exposes a single React component which uses the render prop pattern to validate the input on its child form.
It is built as a pure React component, with no additional dependencies, making it efficient and cheap to add to any React project. Due to interacting with underlying basic HTML tags, it is compatible with popular design Frameworks like Semantic or Bootstrap out of the box.
Additional Info
yarn add react-form-validator-component
import { Validator } from 'react-form-validator-component'
git clone [email protected]:JDLT-Ltd/react-form-validator-component.git
react-form-validator-component comes with a usage example that can be viewed by cloning the repo and running yarn start
class ExampleForm extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props)
this.state = {
fields: {
emailAddress: {
name: 'emailAddresses',
rules: ['isEmailArray'],
required: true,
label: 'Email addresses'
}
}
}
}
render() {
return (
<Validator fields={this.state.fields} parent={this}>
{({ isFormValid, fields, onChange, errors }) => {
return (
<form>
<label>Your Emails</label>
<input name="emailAddresses" onChange={onChange} />
{errors.emailAddresses.map((error, i) => {
return <span key={i}>{error}</span>
})}
{isFormValid && <button type="submit">Submit</button>}
</form>
)
}}
</Validator>
)
}
}
Validator
has two required props
-
fields
- an object with one property per input field
The structure of a field object is as followsRequired Keys
rules
- Each object must have arules
array, containing any combination of strings referring to our predefined validation rules and user-defined custom rules.name
- The second required key isname
which names the field you are validating. This must correspond to the name of the input field you want to validate.
Optional Keys
required
- This key determines whether a field is required. If is is set totrue
, the field will only pass validation with a value. It can alternatively be set to a string which names the validation group it is a part of. See Group ValidationdefaultValue
- You can optionally provide adefaultValue
property for each field. This is only required if you want to validate your form on load but are using form field components which don't correlate one-to-one with actual DOM nodes.onChange
- You can pass a custom onChange for each field, in case you have certain fields which need to be handled differently from the default. E.g.semantic-ui-react
'sDropDown
component (i.e. the matchingname
attribute cannot be found on a DOM node containing the value to be validated). In those cases, the Validator's default method of checking values on load will fail. However, validation on change will be unaffected.label
- You can provide a label key, which will be returned from Validator in case you want to map over fields in order to build a form.
-
parent
- a reference to the component whose stateValidator
should add validated form data to.
RFVC requires the parent components this context for several operations. By default a property will be added toparent
's state with a key equal to thename
attribute of itsinput
and a value equal to the validated input.
Validator also has three optional props
-
onValidate
- A handler defining what to do with validated input.
By default,Validator
will setparent.state[fieldName]
to be either valid input or null if input is invalid. -
validateOnLoad
- a boolean
By defaultValidator
will attempt to validate every field that is prepopulated oncomponentDidMount
. (Empty required fields will not display errors - however they will set isFormValid to false).
If you want to avoid validation running on load, simply set the value to false. -
returnInput
- a boolean
By defaultValidator
will only affect the parent components state when an inputs validation state changes. That is, when input passes validation it is passed to the parents state and if it fails validation it is set to null.
If you pass the returnInput prop, RFVC will always update an Object on the parent's state which contains a key for each input and the corresponding value.
You can use a mixture of predefined rules and your personal custom rules, just as it let's you provide your own functionality for onPassValidation
.
fields: {
emailAddress: {
name: 'emailAddresses',
rules: ['isEmailArray'],
required: true,
label: 'Email addresses'
}
}
We are currently still working on creating a comprehensive list of default rules, please check src/lib/rules.js
for now.
const fields = {
emailAddress: {
name: 'emailAddresses',
required: true,
label: 'Email addresses',
rules: [
'isEmail',
{
validator: data => {
if (data) return true
return false
},
error: 'Please provide a value'
}]
}
}
You can write custom rules and simply use them inside the rules Array as long as they follow RFVC's format of
{
validator: {Your Code},
error: {Your Error Message}
}
Where validator
is a function returning a boolean and error
is the desired error message.
The following arguments are provided to the render prop function:
A boolean. true
when all inputs are validated.
An object with a property for each field. The key matches the name
property of the field and the value will be true
if that field is valid and false
if it's not.
An array of objects which can optionally be used in the render prop function to build your form using a map. Each object will contain within its value
property all properties that were passed into Validator
.
const = fields: {
emailAddress: {
rules: ['isEmail', 'isRequired'],
label: 'email address'
}
}
;[
{
key: 'emailAddress',
value: {
rules: ['isEmail', 'isRequired'],
label: 'email address'
}
}
]
onChange
will validate the input provided and then update the parent component's state, adding any valid input and removing possible invalid input.
Validator
will also provide an errors
object, which contains a key for each validated input, the value of which is an array containing all applicable errors.
These can be displayed as a group or be mapped in order to produce individual error labels.
RFVC supports group validation, where only one member of a group needs to pass it's validation in order for the whole group to be validated.
In order to use group validation, simply replace the value of the required key on fields with the groupname.
i.e.
const fields = {
emailAddresses: {
name: 'emailAddresses',
rules: ['isEmailArray'],
required: 'test',
label: 'Email addresses'
},
something: {
name: 'something',
rules: ['isPhoneNumber'],
required: 'test',
label: 'Something'
}
}