@clearlyhope/vuelidate-core v2.0.0-alpha.11
vuelidate
Simple, lightweight model-based validation for Vue.js 2.x & 3.0
Visit Vuelidate Docs for detailed instructions.
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Installation
You can use Vuelidate just by itself, but we suggest you use it along @vuelidate/validators, as it gives a nice collection of commonly used validators.
Vuelidate supports both Vue 3.0 and Vue 2.x
npm install @vuelidate/core @vuelidate/validators
# or
yarn add @vuelidate/core @vuelidate/validatorsInstall via plugin in Vue 3.0
This is only required if you want to use the
validationsoption.setupusage documented later.
// main.js
import { createApp } from 'vue'
import App from './App.vue'
import { VuelidatePlugin } from '@vuelidate/core'
const app = createApp(App)
app.use(VuelidatePlugin)
app.mount('#app')Install via plugin in Vue 2.x
This is only required if you want to use the
validationsoption.setupusage documented later.
// main.js
import Vue from 'vue'
import VueCompositionApi from '@vue/composition-api'
import { VuelidatePlugin } from '@vuelidate/core'
Vue.use(VueCompositionApi)
Vue.use(VuelidatePlugin)Then you can use it in all components with the Options API
import { email, required } from '@vuelidate/validators'
export default {
name: 'UsersPage',
data: () => ({
form: {
name: '',
email: ''
}
}),
validations: {
form: {
name: { required },
email: { required, email }
}
}
}Usage in setup function
import { ref } from 'vue' // or '@vue/composition-api' in Vue 2.x
import { useVuelidate } from '@vuelidate/core'
import { email, required } from '@vuelidate/validators'
export default {
setup () {
const name = ref('')
const emailAddress = ref('')
const rules = {
name: { required },
emailAddress: { required, email }
}
const $v = useVuelidate(rules, { name, emailAddress })
return { name, emailAddress, $v }
}
}The $v object
{
$dirty: false, // validations will only run when $dirty is true
$touch: <Function>, // call to turn the $dirty state to true
$reset: <Function>, // call to turn the $dirty state to false
$errors: [], // contains all the current errors { $message, $params, $pending, $invalid }
$error: false, // true if validations have not passed
$invalid: false, // as above for compatibility reasons
// there are some other properties here, read the docs
}Lazy validations by default
Validation in Vuelidate 2 is by default lazy, meaning validators are only called, after a field is dirty, so after $touch() is called or by using $model.
This saves extra invocations for async validators as well as makes the initial validation setup a bit more performant.
Resetting dirty state
If you wish to reset a form's $dirty state, you can do so by using the appropriately named $reset method. For example when closing a create/edit modal, you dont want the validation state to persist.
<app-modal @closed="$v.$reset()">
<!-- some inputs -->
</app-modal>Displaying error messages
The validation state holds useful data, like the invalid state of each property validator, along with extra properties, like an error message or extra parameters.
Error messages come out of the box with the bundled validators in @vuelidate/validators package. You can check how change those them over at the Custom Validators page
The easiest way to display errors is to use the form's top level $errors property. It is an array of validation objects, that you can iterate over.
<p
v-for="(error, index) of $v.$errors"
:key="index"
>
<strong>{{ error.$validator }}</strong>
<small> on property</small>
<strong>{{ error.$property }}</strong>
<small> says:</small>
<strong>{{ error.$message }}</strong>
</p>You can also check for errors on each form property:
<p
v-for="(error, index) of $v.name.$errors"
:key="index"
>
<!-- Same as above -->
</p>For more info, visit the Vuelidate Docs.
Development
To test the package run
yarn test:unitTo link the package run
yarn linkTo build run the package, run:
npm run build5 years ago