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Client-side form validation for Rails

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Judge allows easy client side form validation for Rails by porting many ActiveModel::Validation features to JavaScript. The most common validations work through JSON strings stored within HTML5 data attributes and are executed purely on the client side. Wherever you need to, Judge provides a simple interface for AJAX validations too.

Rationale

Whenever we need to give the user instant feedback on their form data, it's common to write some JavaScript to test form element values. Since whatever code we write to manage our data integrity in Ruby has to be copied as closely as possible in JavaScript, we end up with some very unsatisfying duplication of application logic.

In many cases it would be simpler to safely expose the validation information from our models to the client – this is where Judge steps in.

Installation

Judge supports Rails >= 3.1.

Judge relies on Underscore.js in general and JSON2.js for browsers that lack proper JSON support. If your application already makes use of these files, you can safely ignore the versions provided with Judge.

With asset pipeline enabled

Add judge to your Gemfile and run bundle install.

Mount the engine in your routes file, as follows:

# config/routes.rb
mount Judge::Engine => '/judge'

Judge makes three JavaScript files available. You'll always need judge.js and underscore.js, whereas json2.js is only needed in older browsers. Add the following lines to application.js:

//= require underscore
//= require json2
//= require judge

Without asset pipeline

Add judge to your Gemfile and run bundle install. Then run

$ rails generate judge:install path/to/your/js/dir

to copy judge.js to your application. There are --json2 and --underscore options to copy the dependencies too.

Mount the engine in your routes file, as follows:

# config/routes.rb
mount Judge::Engine => '/judge'

Getting started

Add a simple validation to your model.

class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  validates :title, :presence => true
end

Make sure your form uses the Judge::FormBuilder and add the :validate option to the field.

form_for(@post, :builder => Judge::FormBuilder) do |f|
  f.text_field :title, :validate => true
end

On the client side, you can now validate the title input.

judge.validate(document.getElementById('post_title'), {
  valid: function(element) {
    element.style.border = '1px solid green';
  },
  invalid: function(element, messages) {
    element.style.border = '1px solid red';
    alert(messages.join(','));
  }
});

Judge::FormBuilder

You can use any of the methods from the standard ActionView::Helpers::FormBuilder – just add :validate => true to the options hash.

f.date_select :birthday, :validate => true

If you need to use Judge in conjunction with your own custom FormBuilder methods, make sure your FormBuilder inherits from Judge::FormBuilder and use the #add_validate_attr! helper.

class MyFormBuilder < Judge::FormBuilder
  def fancy_text_field(method, options = {})
    add_validate_attr!(self.object, method, options)
    # do your stuff here
  end
end

Available validators

  • presence;
  • length (options: minimum, maximum, is);
  • exclusion (options: in);
  • inclusion (options: in);
  • format (options: with, without); and
  • numericality (options: greater_than, greater_than_or_equal_to, less_than, less_than_or_equal_to, equal_to, odd, even, only_integer);
  • acceptance;
  • confirmation (input and confirmation input must have matching ids);
  • uniqueness;
  • any EachValidator that you have written, provided you add a JavaScript version too and add it to judge.eachValidators.

The allow_blank option is available everywhere it should be. Error messages are looked up according to the Rails i18n API.

Validating uniqueness

In order to validate uniqueness Judge sends requests to the mounted Judge::Engine path, which responds with a JSON representation of an error message array. The array is empty if the value is valid.

Since this effectively means adding an open, queryable endpoint to your application, Judge is cautious and requires you to be explicit about which attributes from which models you would like to expose for validation via XHR. Allowed attributes are configurable as in the following example. Note that you are only required to do this for uniqueness and any other validators you write that make requests to the server.

# config/initializers/judge.rb
Judge.configure do
  expose Post, :title, :body
end

Mounting the engine at a different location

You can choose a path other than '/judge' if you need to; just make sure to set this on the client side too:

# config/routes.rb
mount Judge::Engine => '/whatever'
judge.enginePath = '/whatever';

Unsupported validator options

The :tokenizer option is not currently supported.

Options like :if, :unless and :on are not relevant to Judge. They are reliant on areas of your application that Judge does not expose on the client side.

By default, Judge drops these options on the client side. This seems to work well for the common case, but if you want to ignore validators with unsupported options at global level, do the following in your config.

Judge.configure do
  ignore_unsupported_validators true
end

You can set this behaviour at the validator level too. In your model, use the :judge option.

validates :foo, :presence => { :judge => :ignore }

If you've set unsupported validators to be ignored globally, you can still turn them back on at the validator level.

validates :foo, :presence => { :judge => :force }

Writing your own EachValidator

If you write your own ActiveModel::EachValidator, Judge provides a way to ensure that your I18n error messages are available on the client side. Simply pass to uses_messages any number of message keys and Judge will look up the translated messages. Let's run through an example.

class FooValidator < ActiveModel::EachValidator
  uses_messages :not_foo

  def validate_each(record, attribute, value)
    unless value == 'foo'
      record.errors.add(:title, :not_foo)
    end
  end
end

We'll use the validator in the example above to validate the title attribute of a Post object:

class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  validates :title, :foo => true
end
form_for(@post, :builder => Judge::FormBuilder) do |f|
  f.text_field :title, :validate => true
end

Judge will look for the not_foo message at activerecord.errors.models.post.attributes.title.not_foo first and then onwards down the Rails I18n lookup chain.

We then need to add our own validator method to the judge.eachValidators object on the client side:

judge.eachValidators.foo = function(options, messages) {
  var errorMessages = [];
  // 'this' refers to the form element
  if (this.value !== 'foo') {
    errorMessages.push(messages.not_foo);
  }
  return new judge.Validation(errorMessages);
};

judge.Validation

All client side validators must return a Validation – an object that can exist in three different states: valid, invalid or pending. If your validator function is synchronous, you can return a closed Validation simply by passing an array of error messages to the constructor.

new judge.Validation([]);
  // => empty array, this Validation is 'valid'
new judge.Validation(['must not be blank']);
  // => array has messages, this Validation is 'invalid'

The pending state is provided for asynchronous validation; a Validation object we will close some time in the future. Let's look at an example, using jQuery's popular ajax function:

judge.eachValidators.bar = function() {
  // create a 'pending' validation
  var validation = new judge.Validation();
  $.ajax('/bar-checking-service').done(function(messages) {
    // You can close a Validation with either an array
    // or a string that represents a JSON array
    validation.close(messages);
  });
  return validation;
};

There are helper functions, judge.pending() and judge.closed() for creating a new Validation too.

judge.eachValidators.bar = function() {
  return judge.closed(['not valid']);
};

judge.eachValidators.bar = function() {
  var validation = new judge.pending();
  doAsyncStuff(function(messages) {
    validation.close(messages);
  });
  return validation;
};

In the unlikely event that you don't already use a library with AJAX capability, a basic function is provided for making GET requests as follows:

judge.get('/something', {
  success: function(status, headers, text) {
    // status code 20x
  },
  error: function(status, headers, text) {
    // any other status code
  }
});

Judge extensions

If you use Formtastic or SimpleForm, there are extension gems to help you use Judge within your forms without any extra setup. They are essentially basic patches that add the :validate => true option to the input method.

Formtastic

https://github.com/joecorcoran/judge-formtastic

gem 'judge-formtastic'
semantic_form_for(@user) do |f|
  f.input :name, :validate => true
end

SimpleForm

https://github.com/joecorcoran/judge-simple_form

gem 'judge-simple_form'
simple_form_for(@user) do |f|
  f.input :name, :validate => true
end

Contributing

Fork this repo and submit a pull request with an explanation of the changes you've made. If you're thinking of making a relatively big change, open an issue and let's discuss it first! :)

Run tests (the JavaScript tests require PhantomJS):

$ rake

Credit

Created by Joe Corcoran, whose blog and tweets you can read on the world wide internet. Thank you to every user, email corresponder and pull request submitter.

Released under an MIT license.

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