Model-level "validators" are for automatic validation when there are attempts to save values to the object's fields. Annotations that start with @ followed by an ID (validator name), and that are used on object attributes are validator annotations. See "Creating Complex Validators" below on how to define the validators. The ID value must match the name of a defined validator.
It is important to note that the validators will execute in the following situations:
When an object attribute is set on the frontend and then submitted back to the presenter.
Whenever an object is saved, all validators on its attributes will be used to check the validity of the specified.
If an object has already been saved and is, as a result, being "tracked" by the ORM, any time an attribute is set, validators will be used to check the validity of the field.
If the first case a message will be displayed to the user of the frontend and submission of the values will be blocked until a valid value is specified.
In the last two cases a validation exception will be throw from the DSL code and a log entry will be created. This exception can be caught by the DSL try / catch statement. This allows it to be handled more elegantly with, for example, a message to the user as to why validation has failed.
object Person
{
@FirstnameValidator("validr.msg.fname")
string fname;
@SurnameValidator("validr.msg.sname")
string sname;
}
Creating Complex Validators
In a .mez file, under ./model/, use the validator keyword followed by a validator name, followed by a block containing atomic validators:
Checks that the value is not less than the supplied minimum value.
maxval(6.18);
Checks that the values is not greater than the supplied maximum value.
minlen(2);
Checks that a string value does not have less characters than the supplied minimum value.
maxlen(255);
Checks that a string value does not have more characters than the supplied maximum value.
Regex Validation in Presenter Units
Whereas the above validators are entered into the model object for automatic validation upon save attempts, any value in a string variable can be compared to a specified regular expression for manual validation with bool b = String:regexMatch(s, r).
if (String:regexMatch("27000111abc","^27[0-9]{9,}$") == false) {
Mez:alertError("alert.invalid.phonenum");
}
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