Saturday 12 October 2019

ASP.NET Core Blazor forms and validation

Forms and validation are supported in Blazor using data annotations.
The following ExampleModel type defines validation logic using data annotations:
C#
using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;

public class ExampleModel
{
    [Required]
    [StringLength(10, ErrorMessage = "Name is too long.")]
    public string Name { get; set; }
}
A form is defined using the EditForm component. The following form demonstrates typical elements, components, and Razor code:
C#
<EditForm Model="@exampleModel" OnValidSubmit="@HandleValidSubmit">
    <DataAnnotationsValidator />
    <ValidationSummary />

    <InputText id="name" @bind-Value="@exampleModel.Name" />

    <button type="submit">Submit</button>
</EditForm>

@code {
    private ExampleModel exampleModel = new ExampleModel();

    private void HandleValidSubmit()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("OnValidSubmit");
    }
}
  • The form validates user input in the name field using the validation defined in the ExampleModel type. The model is created in the component's @code block and held in a private field (exampleModel). The field is assigned to the Model attribute of the <EditForm> element.
  • The DataAnnotationsValidator component attaches validation support using data annotations.
  • The ValidationSummary component summarizes validation messages.
  • HandleValidSubmit is triggered when the form successfully submits (passes validation).
A set of built-in input components are available to receive and validate user input. Inputs are validated when they're changed and when a form is submitted. Available input components are shown in the following table.
Input componentRendered as…
InputText<input>
InputTextArea<textarea>
InputSelect<select>
InputNumber<input type="number">
InputCheckbox<input type="checkbox">
InputDate<input type="date">
All of the input components, including EditForm, support arbitrary attributes. Any attribute that doesn't match a component parameter is added to the rendered HTML element.
Input components provide default behavior for validating on edit and changing their CSS class to reflect the field state. Some components include useful parsing logic. For example, InputDate and InputNumber handle unparseable values gracefully by registering them as validation errors. Types that can accept null values also support nullability of the target field (for example, int?).
The following Starship type defines validation logic using a larger set of properties and data annotations than the earlier ExampleModel:
C#
using System;
using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;

public class Starship
{
    [Required]
    [StringLength(16, ErrorMessage = "Identifier too long (16 character limit).")]
    public string Identifier { get; set; }

    public string Description { get; set; }

    [Required]
    public string Classification { get; set; }

    [Range(1, 100000, ErrorMessage = "Accommodation invalid (1-100000).")]
    public int MaximumAccommodation { get; set; }

    [Required]
    [Range(typeof(bool), "true", "true", 
        ErrorMessage = "This form disallows unapproved ships.")]
    public bool IsValidatedDesign { get; set; }

    [Required]
    public DateTime ProductionDate { get; set; }
}
In the preceding example, Description is optional because no data annotations are present.
The following form validates user input using the validation defined in the Starship model:
CSHTML
@page "/FormsValidation"

<h1>Starfleet Starship Database</h1>

<h2>New Ship Entry Form</h2>

<EditForm Model="@starship" OnValidSubmit="@HandleValidSubmit">
    <DataAnnotationsValidator />
    <ValidationSummary />

    <p>
        <label for="identifier">Identifier: </label>
        <InputText id="identifier" @bind-Value="starship.Identifier" />
    </p>
    <p>
        <label for="description">Description (optional): </label>
        <InputTextArea id="description" @bind-Value="starship.Description" />
    </p>
    <p>
        <label for="classification">Primary Classification: </label>
        <InputSelect id="classification" @bind-Value="starship.Classification">
            <option value="">Select classification ...</option>
            <option value="Exploration">Exploration</option>
            <option value="Diplomacy">Diplomacy</option>
            <option value="Defense">Defense</option>
        </InputSelect>
    </p>
    <p>
        <label for="accommodation">Maximum Accommodation: </label>
        <InputNumber id="accommodation" 
            @bind-Value="starship.MaximumAccommodation" />
    </p>
    <p>
        <label for="valid">Engineering Approval: </label>
        <InputCheckbox id="valid" @bind-Value="starship.IsValidatedDesign" />
    </p>
    <p>
        <label for="productionDate">Production Date: </label>
        <InputDate id="productionDate" @bind-Value="starship.ProductionDate" />
    </p>

    <button type="submit">Submit</button>

    <p>
        <a href="http://www.startrek.com/">Star Trek</a>, 
        &copy;1966-2019 CBS Studios, Inc. and 
        <a href="https://www.paramount.com">Paramount Pictures</a>
    </p>
</EditForm>

@code {
    private Starship starship = new Starship();

    private void HandleValidSubmit()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("OnValidSubmit");
    }
}
The EditForm creates an EditContext as a cascading value that tracks metadata about the edit process, including which fields have been modified and the current validation messages. The EditForm also provides convenient events for valid and invalid submits (OnValidSubmitOnInvalidSubmit). Alternatively, use OnSubmit to trigger the validation and check field values with custom validation code.

InputText based on the input event

Use the InputText component to create a custom component that uses the input event instead of the change event.
Create a component with the following markup, and use the component just as InputText is used:
CSHTML
@inherits InputText

<input 
    @attributes="AdditionalAttributes" 
    class="@CssClass" 
    value="@CurrentValue" 
    @oninput="EventCallback.Factory.CreateBinder<string>(
        this, __value => CurrentValueAsString = __value, CurrentValueAsString)" />

Validation support

The DataAnnotationsValidator component attaches validation support using data annotations to the cascaded EditContext. Enabling support for validation using data annotations requires this explicit gesture. To use a different validation system than data annotations, replace the DataAnnotationsValidator with a custom implementation. 
The ValidationSummary component summarizes all validation messages, which is similar to the Validation Summary Tag Helper.
The ValidationMessage component displays validation messages for a specific field, which is similar to the Validation Message Tag Helper. Specify the field for validation with the For attribute and a lambda expression naming the model property:
CSHTML
<ValidationMessage For="@(() => starship.MaximumAccommodation)" />
The ValidationMessage and ValidationSummary components support arbitrary attributes. Any attribute that doesn't match a component parameter is added to the generated <div> or <ul> element.

Validation of complex or collection type properties

Validation attributes applied to the properties of a model validate when the form is submitted. However, the properties of collections or complex data types of a model aren't validated on form submission. To honor the nested validation attributes in this scenario, use a custom validation component.

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