A library for using FluentValidation with Blazor
You can install from Nuget using the following command:
Install-Package Blazored.FluentValidation
Or via the Visual Studio package manger.
Start by add the following using statement to your root _Imports.razor
.
@using Blazored.FluentValidation
You can then use it as follows within a EditForm
component.
<EditForm Model="@_person" OnValidSubmit="@SubmitValidForm">
<FluentValidationValidator />
<ValidationSummary />
<p>
<label>Name: </label>
<InputText @bind-Value="@_person.Name" />
</p>
<p>
<label>Age: </label>
<InputNumber @bind-Value="@_person.Age" />
</p>
<p>
<label>Email Address: </label>
<InputText @bind-Value="@_person.EmailAddress" />
</p>
<button type="submit">Save</button>
</EditForm>
@code {
private Person _person = new();
private void SubmitValidForm()
=> Console.WriteLine("Form Submitted Successfully!");
}
By default, the component will check for validators registered with DI first. If it can't find, any it will then try scanning the applications assemblies to find validators using reflection.
You can control this behaviour using the DisableAssemblyScanning
parameter. If you only wish the component to get validators from DI, set the value to true
and assembly scanning will be skipped.
<FluentValidationValidator DisableAssemblyScanning="@true" />
You can find examples of different configurations in the sample projects. The Blazor Server project is configured to load validators from DI only. The Blazor WebAssembly project is setup to load validators using reflection.
Note: When scanning assemblies the component will swallow any exceptions thrown by that process. This is to stop exceptions thrown by scanning third party dependencies crashing your app.
The validator must be publicly accessible and inherit directly from AbstractValidator<T>
.
If you're using async validation, you can use the ValidateAsync
method on the FluentValidationValidator
.
<EditForm Model="@_person" OnSubmit="@SubmitFormAsync">
<FluentValidationValidator @ref="_fluentValidationValidator" />
<ValidationSummary />
<p>
<label>Name: </label>
<InputText @bind-Value="@_person.Name" />
</p>
<p>
<label>Age: </label>
<InputNumber @bind-Value="@_person.Age" />
</p>
<p>
<label>Email Address: </label>
<InputText @bind-Value="@_person.EmailAddress" />
</p>
<button type="submit">Save</button>
</EditForm>
@code {
private Person _person = new();
private FluentValidationValidator? _fluentValidationValidator;
private void SubmitFormAsync()
{
if (await _fluentValidationValidator!.ValidateAsync())
{
Console.WriteLine("Form Submitted Successfully!");
}
}
}
RuleSets allow validation rules to be grouped and executed together while ignoring other rules. RulesSets are supported in two ways.
The first is setting RuleSets via the Options
parameter on the FluentValidationValidator
component.
<FluentValidationValidator Options="@(options => options.IncludeRuleSets("Names"))" />
The second is when manually validating the model using the Validate
or ValidateAsync
methods.
<FluentValidationValidator @ref="_fluentValidationValidator" />
@code {
private FluentValidationValidator? _fluentValidationValidator;
private void PartialValidate()
=> _fluentValidationValidator?.Validate(options => options.IncludeRuleSets("Names"));
}