Skip to content

crushlovely/SwiftValidator

 
 

Repository files navigation

SwiftValidator

Build Status Carthage compatible codecov.io

Swift Validator is a rule-based validation library for Swift.

Swift Validator

Core Concepts

  • UITextField + [Rule] + (and optional error UILabel) go into Validator
  • UITextField + ValidationError come out of Validator
  • Validator evaluates [Rule] sequentially and stops evaluating when a Rule fails.

Installation

# Podfile
source 'https://github.com/CocoaPods/Specs.git'
platform :ios, "8.1"

use_frameworks!

# As of 4.0.0, SwiftValidator has been extended beyond UITextField
# Note: Installing 4.x.x will break code from 3.x.x
pod 'SwiftValidator', :git => 'https://github.com/jpotts18/SwiftValidator.git', :tag => '4.0.0'

# For older versions
pod 'SwiftValidator', :git => 'https://github.com/jpotts18/SwiftValidator.git', :tag => '3.0.5'

Install into your project:

$ pod install

Open your project in Xcode from the .xcworkspace file (not the usual project file):

$ open MyProject.xcworkspace

If you are using Carthage you will need to add this to your Cartfile

github "jpotts18/SwiftValidator"

Usage

You can now import SwiftValidator framework into your files.

Initialize the Validator by setting a delegate to a View Controller or other object.

// ViewController.swift
let validator = Validator()

Register the fields that you want to validate

override func viewDidLoad() {
	super.viewDidLoad()

	// Validation Rules are evaluated from left to right.
	validator.registerField(fullNameTextField, rules: [RequiredRule(), FullNameRule()])
	
	// You can pass in error labels with your rules
	// You can pass in custom error messages to regex rules (such as ZipCodeRule and EmailRule)
	validator.registerField(emailTextField, errorLabel: emailErrorLabel, rules: [RequiredRule(), EmailRule(message: "Invalid email")])
	
	// You can validate against other fields using ConfirmRule
	validator.registerField(emailConfirmTextField, errorLabel: emailConfirmErrorLabel, rules: [ConfirmationRule(confirmField: emailTextField)])
	
	// You can now pass in regex and length parameters through overloaded contructors
	validator.registerField(phoneNumberTextField, errorLabel: phoneNumberErrorLabel, rules: [RequiredRule(), MinLengthRule(length: 9)])
	validator.registerField(zipcodeTextField, errorLabel: zipcodeErrorLabel, rules: [RequiredRule(), ZipCodeRule(regex = "\\d{5}")])

	// You can unregister a text field if you no longer want to validate it
	validator.unregisterField(fullNameTextField)
}

Validate Fields on button tap or however you would like to trigger it.

@IBAction func signupTapped(sender: AnyObject) {
	validator.validate(self)
}

Implement the Validation Delegate in your View controller

// ValidationDelegate methods

func validationSuccessful() {
	// submit the form
}

func validationFailed(errors:[(Validatable ,ValidationError)]) {
	// turn the fields to red
	for (field, error) in errors {
		if let field = field as? UITextField {
			field.layer.borderColor = UIColor.redColor().CGColor
			field.layer.borderWidth = 1.0		
		}
		error.errorLabel?.text = error.errorMessage // works if you added labels
		error.errorLabel?.hidden = false
	}
}

Single Field Validation

You may use single field validation in some cases. This could be useful in situations such as controlling responders:

// Don't forget to use UITextFieldDelegate
// and delegate yourTextField to self in viewDidLoad()
func textFieldShouldReturn(textField: UITextField) -> Bool {
    validator.validateField(textField){ error in
        if error == nil {
            // Field validation was successful
        } else {
            // Validation error occurred
        }
    }
    return true
}

Custom Validation

We will create a SSNRule class to show how to create your own Validation. A United States Social Security Number (or SSN) is a field that consists of XXX-XX-XXXX.

Create a class that inherits from RegexRule

class SSNVRule: RegexRule {

    static let regex = "^\\d{3}-\\d{2}-\\d{4}$"
	
    convenience init(message : String = "Not a valid SSN"){
	self.init(regex: SSNVRule.regex, message : message)
    }
}

Documentation

Checkout the docs here via @jazzydocs.

Credits

Swift Validator is written and maintained by Jeff Potter @jpotts18. David Patterson @dave_tw12 actively works as a collaborator. Special thanks to Deniz Adalar for adding validation beyond UITextField.

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch git checkout -b my-new-feature
  3. Commit your changes git commit -am 'Add some feature'
  4. Push to the branch git push origin my-new-feature
  5. Create a new Pull Request
  6. Make sure code coverage is at least 70%

About

A rule-based validation library for Swift

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Swift 97.8%
  • Ruby 1.3%
  • Objective-C 0.9%