Painless Vue forms
- 🍞 Easy: Declarative validation that is familiar and easy to setup
- 🧘♀️ Flexible: Synchronous, Asynchronous, field-level or form-level validation
- ⚡️ Fast: Build faster forms faster with intuitive API and small footprint
- 🏏 Minimal: Only handles the complicated form concerns, gives you full control over everything else
- 😎 UI Agnostic: Works with native HTML elements or your favorite UI library components
- 🦾 Progressive: Works whether you use Vue.js as a progressive enhancement or in a complex setup
- ✅ Built-in Rules: Companion lib with 25+ Rules that covers most needs in most web applications
- 🌐 i18n: 45+ locales for built-in rules contributed by developers from all over the world
# Install with yarn
yarn add vee-validate
# Install with npm
npm install vee-validate --save
The main v4 version supports Vue 3.x only, for previous versions of Vue, check the following the table
vue Version | vee-validate version | Documentation Link |
---|---|---|
2.x |
2.x or 3.x |
v2 or v3 |
3.x |
4.x |
v4 |
vee-validate offers two styles to integrate form validation into your Vue.js apps.
Higher-order components are better suited for most of your cases. Register the Field
and Form
components and create a simple required
validator:
import { Field, Form } from 'vee-validate';
export default {
components: {
Field,
Form,
},
methods: {
isRequired(value) {
return value ? true : 'This field is required';
},
},
};
Then use the Form
and Field
components to render your form:
<Form v-slot="{ errors }">
<Field name="field" :rules="isRequired" />
<span>{{ errors.field }}</span>
</Form>
The Field
component renders an input
of type text
by default but you can control that
If you want more fine grained control, you can use useField
function to compose validation logic into your component:
import { useField } from 'vee-validate';
export default {
setup() {
// Validator function
const isRequired = value => (value ? true : 'This field is required');
const { value, errorMessage } = useField('field', isRequired);
return {
value,
errorMessage,
};
},
};
Then in your template, use v-model
to bind the value
to your input and display the errors using errorMessage
:
<input name="field" v-model="value" />
<span>{{ errorMessage }}</span>
Read the documentation and demos.
You are welcome to contribute to this project, but before you do, please make sure you read the contribution guide.
- Inspired by Laravel's validation syntax
- v4 API Inspired by Formik's
- Logo by Baianat
Here we honor past contributors and sponsors who have been a major part on this project.