jQuery validate: How to add a rule for regular expression validation?

JqueryRegexJquery Validate

Jquery Problem Overview


I am using the jQuery validation plugin. Great stuff! I want to migrate my existing ASP.NET solution to use jQuery instead of the ASP.NET validators. I am missing a replacement for the regular expression validator. I want to be able to do something like this:

$("Textbox").rules("add", { regularExpression: "^[a-zA-Z'.\s]{1,40}$" })

How do I add a custom rule to achieve this?

Jquery Solutions


Solution 1 - Jquery

Thanks to the answer of redsquare I added a method like this:

$.validator.addMethod(
  "regex",
  function(value, element, regexp) {
    var re = new RegExp(regexp);
    return this.optional(element) || re.test(value);
  },
  "Please check your input."
);

Now all you need to do to validate against any regex is this:

$("#Textbox").rules("add", { regex: "^[a-zA-Z'.\\s]{1,40}$" })

Additionally, it looks like there is a file called additional-methods.js that contains the method "pattern", which can be a RegExp when created using the method without quotes.


Edit

The pattern function is now the preferred way to do this, making the example:

$("#Textbox").rules("add", { pattern: "^[a-zA-Z'.\\s]{1,40}$" })

Solution 2 - Jquery

You can use the addMethod()

e.g

$.validator.addMethod('postalCode', function (value) { 
    return /^((\d{5}-\d{4})|(\d{5})|([A-Z]\d[A-Z]\s\d[A-Z]\d))$/.test(value); 
}, 'Please enter a valid US or Canadian postal code.');

good article here https://web.archive.org/web/20130609222116/http://www.randallmorey.com/blog/2008/mar/16/extending-jquery-form-validation-plugin/

Solution 3 - Jquery

I had some trouble putting together all the pieces for doing a jQuery regular expression validator, but I got it to work... Here is a complete working example. It uses the 'Validation' plugin which can be found in jQuery Validation Plugin

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
    <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
    <script src="http://YOURJQUERYPATH/js/jquery.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
    <script src="http://YOURJQUERYPATH/js/jquery.validate.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript">

        $().ready(function() {
            $.validator.addMethod("EMAIL", function(value, element) {
                return this.optional(element) || /^[a-zA-Z0-9._-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9-]+\.[a-zA-Z.]{2,5}$/i.test(value);
            }, "Email Address is invalid: Please enter a valid email address.");

            $.validator.addMethod("PASSWORD",function(value,element){
                return this.optional(element) || /^(?=.*\d)(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z]).{8,16}$/i.test(value);
            },"Passwords are 8-16 characters with uppercase letters, lowercase letters and at least one number.");

            $.validator.addMethod("SUBMIT",function(value,element){
                return this.optional(element) || /[^ ]/i.test(value);
            },"You did not click the submit button.");

            // Validate signup form on keyup and submit
            $("#LOGIN").validate({
                rules: {
                    EMAIL: "required EMAIL",
                    PASSWORD: "required PASSWORD",
                    SUBMIT: "required SUBMIT",
                },
            });
        });
    </script>
</head>
<body>
    <div id="LOGIN_FORM" class="form">
        <form id="LOGIN" name="LOGIN" method="post" action="/index/secure/authentication?action=login">
            <h1>Log In</h1>
            <div id="LOGIN_EMAIL">
                <label for="EMAIL">Email Address</label>
                <input id="EMAIL" name="EMAIL" type="text" value="" tabindex="1" />
            </div>
            <div id="LOGIN_PASSWORD">
                <label for="PASSWORD">Password</label>
                <input id="PASSWORD" name="PASSWORD" type="password" value="" tabindex="2" />
            </div>
            <div id="LOGIN_SUBMIT">
                <input id="SUBMIT" name="SUBMIT" type="submit" value="Submit" tabindex="3" />
            </div>
        </form>
    </div>
</body>
</html>

Solution 4 - Jquery

No reason to define the regex as a string.

$.validator.addMethod(
    "regex",
    function(value, element, regexp) {
        var check = false;
        return this.optional(element) || regexp.test(value);
    },
    "Please check your input."
);

and

telephone: { required: true, regex : /^[\d\s]+$/, minlength: 5 },

tis better this way, no?

Solution 5 - Jquery

Extending PeterTheNiceGuy's answer a bit:

$.validator.addMethod(
        "regex",
        function(value, element, regexp) {
            if (regexp.constructor != RegExp)
                regexp = new RegExp(regexp);
            else if (regexp.global)
                regexp.lastIndex = 0;
            return this.optional(element) || regexp.test(value);
        },
        "Please check your input."
);

This would allow you to pass a regex object to the rule.

$("Textbox").rules("add", { regex: /^[a-zA-Z'.\s]{1,40}$/ });

Resetting the lastIndex property is necessary when the g-flag is set on the RegExp object. Otherwise it would start validating from the position of the last match with that regex, even if the subject string is different.

Some other ideas I had was be to enable you use arrays of regex's, and another rule for the negation of regex's:

$("password").rules("add", {
    regex: [
        /^[a-zA-Z'.\s]{8,40}$/,
        /^.*[a-z].*$/,
        /^.*[A-Z].*$/,
        /^.*[0-9].*$/
    ],
    '!regex': /password|123/
});

But implementing those would maybe be too much.

Solution 6 - Jquery

As mentioned on the addMethod documentation:

Please note: While the temptation is great to add a regex method that checks it's parameter against the value, it is much cleaner to encapsulate those regular expressions inside their own method. If you need lots of slightly different expressions, try to extract a common parameter. A library of regular expressions: http://regexlib.com/DisplayPatterns.aspx

So yes, you have to add a method for each regular expression. The overhead is minimal, while it allows you to give the regex a name (not to be underestimated), a default message (handy) and the ability to reuse it a various places, without duplicating the regex itself over and over.

Solution 7 - Jquery

I got it to work like this:

Solution 8 - Jquery

You may use pattern defined in the additional-methods.js file. Note that this additional-methods.js file must be included after jQuery Validate dependency, then you can just use

$("#frm").validate({
    rules: {
        Textbox: {
            pattern: /^[a-zA-Z'.\s]{1,40}$/
        },
    },
    messages: {
        Textbox: {
            pattern: 'The Textbox string format is invalid'
        }
    }
});

<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery-validate/1.17.0/jquery.validate.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery-validate/1.17.0/additional-methods.min.js"></script>
<form id="frm" method="get" action="">
    <fieldset>
        <p>
            <label for="fullname">Textbox</label>
            <input id="Textbox" name="Textbox" type="text">
        </p>
    </fieldset>
</form>

Solution 9 - Jquery

This is working code.

function validateSignup()
{	
	$.validator.addMethod(
	        "regex",
	        function(value, element, regexp) 
	        {
	            if (regexp.constructor != RegExp)
	                regexp = new RegExp(regexp);
	            else if (regexp.global)
	                regexp.lastIndex = 0;
	            return this.optional(element) || regexp.test(value);
	        },
	        "Please check your input."
	);
	
	$('#signupForm').validate(
	{
		
		onkeyup	: false,
	    errorClass: "req_mess",
	    ignore: ":hidden",
		validClass: "signup_valid_class",
		errorClass: "signup_error_class",
		
		rules:
		{
			
			email:
			{
				required: true,
	            email: true,
	            regex: /^[A-Za-z0-9_]+\@[A-Za-z0-9_]+\.[A-Za-z0-9_]+/,
			},
			
			userId:
			{
				required: true,
	            minlength: 6,
	            maxlength: 15,
				regex: /^[A-Za-z0-9_]{6,15}$/,
			},
			
			phoneNum:
			{
				required: true,
				regex: /^[+-]{1}[0-9]{1,3}\-[0-9]{10}$/,
			},
			
		},
		messages: 
		{
			email: 
			{
	            required: 'You must enter a email',
	            regex: 'Please enter a valid email without spacial chars, ie, [email protected]'
	        },
	        
	        userId:
	        {
	        	required: 'Alphanumeric, _, min:6, max:15',
	        	regex: "Please enter any alphaNumeric char of length between 6-15, ie, sbp_arun_2016"
	        },
	        
	        phoneNum: 
	        {
                required: "Please enter your phone number",
                regex: "e.g. +91-1234567890"	
            },
			
		},
		
		submitHandler: function (form)
		{
			return true;
		}
	});
}

Solution 10 - Jquery

we mainly use the markup notation of jquery validation plugin and the posted samples did not work for us, when flags are present in the regex, e.g.

<input type="text" name="myfield" regex="/^[0-9]{3}$/i" />

therefore we use the following snippet

$.validator.addMethod(
        "regex",
        function(value, element, regstring) {
        	// fast exit on empty optional
        	if (this.optional(element)) {
        		return true;
        	}
        	
        	var regParts = regstring.match(/^\/(.*?)\/([gim]*)$/);
        	if (regParts) {
        		// the parsed pattern had delimiters and modifiers. handle them. 
        		var regexp = new RegExp(regParts[1], regParts[2]);
        	} else {
        		// we got pattern string without delimiters
        		var regexp = new RegExp(regstring);
        	}
        	
            return regexp.test(value);
        },
        "Please check your input."
);	

Of course now one could combine this code, with one of the above to also allow passing RegExp objects into the plugin, but since we didn't needed it we left this exercise for the reader ;-).

PS: there is also bundled plugin for that, https://github.com/jzaefferer/jquery-validation/blob/master/src/additional/pattern.js

Solution 11 - Jquery

This worked for me, being one of the validation rules:

    Zip: {
                required: true,
                regex: /^\d{5}(?:[-\s]\d{4})?$/
            }

Hope it helps

Solution 12 - Jquery

    $.validator.methods.checkEmail = function( value, element ) {
        return this.optional( element ) || /[a-z]+@[a-z]+\.[a-z]+/.test( value );
    }

    $("#myForm").validate({
        rules: {
            email: {
                required: true,
                checkEmail: true
            }
        },
        messages: {
            email: "incorrect email"
        }
    });

Solution 13 - Jquery

Have you tried this??

$("Textbox").rules("add", { regex: "^[a-zA-Z'.\\s]{1,40}$", messages: { regex: "The text is invalid..." } })

Note: make sure to escape all the "\" of ur regex by adding another "\" in front of them else the regex wont work as expected.

Attributions

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