π React Final Form HTML5 Validation is swappable replacement for π React Final Form's Field
component that provides two-way HTML5 Validation bindings. The bindings are two-way because any HTML5 contraint validation errors will be added to the π Final Form state, and any field-level validation errors from π Final Form will be set into the HTML5 validity.customError
state. Unfortunately, this functionality is not compatible with π React Final Form record-level validation, so the two should not be mixed.
Good question. The reason is that not everyone needs this functionality, and not everyone is using π React Final Form with the DOM (e.g. some people use it with React Native). Therefore it makes sense to make this a separate package. This version of Field
is a thin wrapper over the official Field
component, and the only Field
API that this library uses/overrides is the field-level validate
prop, so even if you are using this library's Field
component, you will still get improvements as features are added to the π React Final Form library in the future.
Safari | Chrome | Firefox |
---|---|---|
npm install --save react-final-form-html5-validation react-final-form final-form
or
yarn add react-final-form-html5-validation react-final-form final-form
Example π
The way you specify rules and error messages in HTML5 is by giving first a rule prop, e.g. required
, min
, maxLength
, and then an error message prop, e.g. valueMissing
, rangeUnderflow
, or tooLong
, respectively. This library comes with built-in English defaults for the error messages, but you will probably want to override those by passing in your own.
import { Form } from 'react-final-form'
import { Field } from 'react-final-form-html5-validation'
const MyForm = () => (
<Form
onSubmit={onSubmit}
render={({ handleSubmit, pristine, invalid }) => (
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
<div>
<label>First Name</label>
<Field
name="firstName"
component="input"
type="text"
placeholder="First Name"
required
maxLength={20}
tooLong="That name is too long!"
pattern="[A-Z].+"
/>
</div>
...
</form>
)}
/>
)
These all come from the HTML Standard.
Rule | Value | Message | Meaning |
---|---|---|---|
badInput |
The value is invalid somehow | ||
max |
Number |
rangeOverflow |
The value is too high |
maxLength |
Number |
tooLong |
The value is too long |
min |
Number |
rangeUnderflow |
The value is too small |
minLength |
Number |
tooShort |
The value is too short |
pattern |
string |
patternMismatch |
The value does not match the regular expression |
required |
boolean |
valueMissing |
The value is missing |
step |
Number |
stepMismatch |
The value does not match the step granularity |
typeMismatch |
The value does not match the specified type |
In addition to all the FieldProps
that you can pass to the standard Field
, to an HTML5 Validation Field
, you may also pass:
The maximum value allowed as the value for the input. If invalid, the rangeOverflow
error will be displayed.
The maximum length allowed of the input value. If invalid, the tooLong
error will be displayed.
The minimum value allowed as the value for the input. If invalid, the rangeUnderflow
error will be displayed.
The minimum length allowed of the input value. If invalid, the tooShort
error will be displayed.
A string regular expression to test the input value against. If invalid, the patternMismatch
error will be displayed.
Whether or not the field is required. If invalid, the valueMissing
error will be displayed.
The step size between the min
and max
values. If invalid, the stepMismatch
error will be displayed.
The message to display when the input is invalid somehow.
The message to display when the value does not match the pattern specified by the pattern
prop.
The message to display when the value is higher than the max
prop.
The message to display when the value is lower than the min
prop.
The message to display the value is not one of the valid steps specified by the step
prop.
The message to display when the value longer than the value specified by the maxLength
prop.
The message to display when the value shorter than the value specified by the minLength
prop.
The message to display when the value does not match the type
prop.
The message to display when the value is required, but missing.
If internationalization is important to your project, you should probably create a component that wraps this component, pulls the localized messages from the context, and renders:
<Field {...props} {...messages} />