A lightweight form validation script that augments native HTML5 form validation elements and attributes, providing a better user experience and giving you more control.
When a visitor leaves a field, Validate.js immediately validates the field and displays an error if applicable. It also validates the entire form on submit, and provides support for custom onSubmit()
functions (for example, Ajax form submission).
This plugin has been deprecated and replaced with Bouncer, which uses the came conventions but has better under-the-hood engineering.
Validate.js attempted to use the Constraint Validation API to validate fields. The API is buggy at best, and smoothing it across browsers became an increasingly difficult task. As a result, I wrote an entirely new plugin from the ground-up.
Because this plugin was featured in my CSS Tricks series, I'm leaving it up in read only mode for archival purposes.
It will no longer be maintained or updated.
Want to learn how to write your own vanilla JS plugins? Check out my Vanilla JS Pocket Guides or join the Vanilla JS Academy and level-up as a web developer. 🚀
Compiled and production-ready code can be found in the dist
directory. The src
directory contains development code.
There are two versions of Validate: the standalone version, and one that comes preloaded with a polyfill for the Validaty State API, which is only supported in newer browsers and implemented inconsistently.
If you're including your own polyfill or don't want to enable this feature for older browsers, use the standalone version. Otherwise, use the version with the polyfill.
Direct Download
You can download the files directly from GitHub.
<script src="path/to/validate.polyfills.min.js"></script>
CDN
You can also use the jsDelivr CDN. I recommend linking to a specific version number or version range to prevent major updates from breaking your site. Validate uses semantic versioning.
<!-- Always get the latest version -->
<!-- Not recommended for production sites! -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/cferdinandi/validate/dist/validate.min.js"></script>
<!-- Get minor updates and patch fixes within a major version -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/cferdinandi/validate@2/dist/validate.min.js"></script>
<!-- Get patch fixes within a minor version -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/cferdinandi/validate@2.2/dist/validate.min.js"></script>
<!-- Get a specific version -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/cferdinandi/validate@2.2.0/dist/validate.min.js"></script>
<!-- Get a specific version with legacy browser support -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/cferdinandi/validate@2.2.0/dist/validate.polyfills.min.js"></script>
Add the required
attribute to required fields. Use type="email"
and type="url"
for email addresses and URLs, respectively. Include pattern
attributes, min
and max
, and so on to set validation criteria for your form fields. View a full list of types and attributes on MDN.
<div>
<label for="email">Email</label>
<input type="email" id="email" required>
</div>
<div>
<label for="url">URL</label>
<input type="url" id="url" required>
</div>
If you're using validation patterns, you can also include a title
with a custom validation message. This will display in the error message.
<div>
<label for="password">Password (At least 1 uppercase character, 1 lowercase character, and 1 number)</label>
<input type="password" id="password" value="" title="Please choose a password that includes at least 1 uppercase character, 1 lowercase character, and 1 number." pattern="^(?=.*\d)(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?!.*\s).*$" required>
</div>
Add the [data-validate]
attribute to any forms you want validated.
<form data-validate>
...
</form>
In the footer of your page, after the content, initialize Validate.js. And that's it, you're done. Nice work!
<script>
validate.init();
</script>
Validate does not have a default export, but does support CommonJS and can be used with native ES6 module imports.
import('/path/to/validate.polyfills.min.js')
.then(function () {
validate.init();
});
It uses a UMD pattern, and should also work in most major module bundlers and package managers.
Validate.js does not come pre-packaged with any styles for fields with errors or error messages. Use the .error
class to style fields, and the .error-message
class to style error messages.
Need a starting point? Here's some really lightweight CSS you can use.
/**
* Form Validation Errors
*/
.error {
border-color: red;
}
.error-message {
color: red;
font-style: italic;
margin-bottom: 1em;
}
If you would prefer, you can work with the development code in the src
directory using the included Gulp build system. This compiles, lints, and minifies code.
Make sure these are installed first.
- In bash/terminal/command line,
cd
into your project directory. - Run
npm install
to install required files. - When it's done installing, run one of the task runners to get going:
gulp
manually compiles files.gulp watch
automatically compiles files when changes are made and applies changes using LiveReload.
Validate.js includes smart defaults and works right out of the box. But if you want to customize things, it also has a robust API that provides multiple ways for you to adjust the default options and settings.
You can pass options and callbacks into Validate through the init()
function:
validate.init({
// Classes and Selectors
selector: '[data-validate]', // The selector for forms to validate
fieldClass: 'error', // The class to apply to fields with errors
errorClass: 'error-message', // The class to apply to error messages
// Messages
messageValueMissing: 'Please fill out this field.', // Displayed when a required field is left empty
messageValueMissingCheckbox: 'This field is required.', // Displayed when a required checkbox isn't checked
messageValueMissingRadio: 'Please select a value.', // Displayed when a required radio button isn't selected
messageValueMissingSelect: 'Please select a value.', // Displayed when an option from a required select menu isn't selected
messageValueMissingSelectMulti: 'Please select at least one value.', // Displayed when an option from a require multi-select menu isn't selected
messageTypeMismatchEmail: 'Please enter an email address.', // Displayed when a `type="email"` field isn't a valid email
messageTypeMismatchURL: 'Please enter a URL.', // Displayed when a `type="url"` field isn't a valid URL
messageTooShort: 'Please lengthen this text to {minLength} characters or more. You are currently using {length} characters.', // Displayed with the `minLength` attribute is used and the input value is too short
messageTooLong: 'Please shorten this text to no more than {maxLength} characters. You are currently using {length} characters.', // Displayed with the `maxLength` attribute is used and the input value is too long
messagePatternMismatch: 'Please match the requested format.', // Displayed with the `pattern` attribute is used and the pattern doesn't match (if a `title` attribute is used, that's displayed instead)
messageBadInput: 'Please enter a number.', // Displayed when the field is numeric (ex. `type="number"`) but the value is not a number
messageStepMismatch: 'Please select a valid value.', // Displayed when the `step` attribute is used and the value doesn't adhere to it
messageRangeOverflow: 'Please select a value that is no more than {max}.', // Displayed with the `max` attribute is used and the input value is too hight
messageRangeUnderflow: 'Please select a value that is no less than {min}.', // Displayed with the `mind` attribute is used and the input value is too low
messageGeneric: 'The value you entered for this field is invalid.', // A catchall error, displayed when the field fails validation and none of the other conditions apply
// Form Submission
disableSubmit: false, // If true, don't submit the form to the server (for Ajax for submission)
onSubmit: function (form, fields) {}, // Function to run if the form successfully validates
// Callbacks
beforeShowError: function (field, error) {}, // Function to run before an error is display
afterShowError: function (field, error) {}, // Function to run after an error is display
beforeRemoveError: function (field) {}, // Function to run before an error is removed
afterRemoveError: function (field) {}, // Function to run after an error is removed
});
You can also call Validate.js's public methods in your own scripts.
Check if a field has a validation error.
validate.hasError(
field, // The field to validate
options // User settings, same as the ones passed in during validate.init() [optional]
);
Example
var field = document.querySelector('[name="email"]');
var error = validate.hasError(field);
if (error) {
// Do something...
}
Show an error message on a field.
validate.showError(
field, // The field to show an error message for
error, // The error message to show
options // User settings, same as the ones passed in during validate.init() [optional]
);
Example 1: Write your own error
var field = document.querySelector('[name="email"]');
var error = 'This field is wrong, dude!';
validate.showError(field, error);
Example 2: Using hasError()
var field = document.querySelector('[name="url"]');
var error = validate.hasError(field);
validate.showError(field, error);
Remove the error message from a field.
/**
* Remove an error message from a field
* @public
* @param {Node} field The field to remove the error from
* @param {Object} options User options
*/
validate.removeError(
field, // The field to remove the error from
options // User settings, same as the ones passed in during validate.init() [optional]
);
Example
var field = document.querySelector('[name="email"]');
validate.removeError(field);
Destroy the current validate.init()
. Removes all errors and resets the DOM. This is called automatically during the init
function to remove any existing initializations.
validate.destroy();
Validate.js works in all modern browsers, and (mostly) IE 10 and above.
Unfortunately, not all validation types are supported by all versions of IE and Edge consistently. For example, IE10 and IE11 will check if a form input is too long (using the maxLength
attribute), but Edge will not. And no version of IE or Edge will check if it's too short (using the minLength
attribute).
Use the included polyfill version of Validate (or include your own) to push support back to IE10, and add missing features to partially supported browsers.
If you also include Eli Grey's classList.js polyfill, you can push support even further, back to IE9.
The code is available under the MIT License.