The conditional validation module provides an enableValidation
attribute directive that can be used to conditionally enable/disable validation for elements with an ngModel
directive.
Most (if not all) of the standard Angular validators can be disabled individually using falsy values.
For example when the expression for a ngMin
attribute evaluates to undefined
, then validation will be disabled for the min
validator.
However, this requires that the logic that determines when validation should be enabled is combined with the logic that defines the values for parameterized validators.
At best you can write something like this:
<input
type="date"
ng-model="myCtrl.startDate"
ng-min="myCtrl.enableStartDateValidation && myCtrl.minStartDate">
The enableValidation
directive provides a cleaner method to separate the logic.
When applied to the example above, the result looks like this:
<input type="date"
ng-model="myCtrl.startDate"
ng-min="myCtrl.minStartDate"
enable-validation="myCtrl.enableStartDateValidation">
Using the enableValidation
directive it also easier to disable multiple validators at once.
If the example above is extended with a max
validator, you can simply add the ng-max
attribute without having to repeat myCtrl.enableStartDateValidation &&
in the validator expression.
The result:
<input type="date"
ng-model="myCtrl.startDate"
ng-min="myCtrl.minStartDate"
ng-max="myCtrl.maxStartDate"
enable-validation="myCtrl.enableStartDateValidation">
Another reason for using the enableValidation
directive is when you use (custom) validators that do not provide a method to (conditionally) disable them.
NPM
npm install angular-conditional-validation
Bower
bower install angular-conditional-validation
To use the Angular conditional validation module in your application either include the script (angular-conditional-validation(.min).js
) using a <script>
tag or require/load it via a script loader.
Furthermore add angularConditionalValidation
to the Angular dependencies of your application.
Now you should be able to use the enableValidation
directive in your templates.
The directive supports three types of values:
- Objects: When object values are used to enable/disable validation for individual validators. The property keys of the object should match with the name of the validators. The value of a property (which may be a function) determines whether validation is enabled/disabled.
- Functions: Functions values will be invoked every time validation is triggered and the return value (which may be an object) is then used to determine whether validation is enabled or disabled.
- Other: Any other value type will be evaluated as an inherent boolean value, so any truthy value enables validation while falsy values disable validation.
Both synchronous and asynchronous validators are supported by the enableValidation
directive.
A set of demos can be found at the following JS Bin: jsbin.com/necile
var ctrl = this;
ctrl.someValue = 'hello';
ctrl.anotherValue = true;
<input type="text" ng-model="ctrl.someValue" ng-minlength="5" enable-validation="ctrl.anotherValue">
var ctrl = this;
ctrl.someValue = 'hello';
ctrl.shouldValidate = function() {
return new Date().getDay() == 1; // Only validate on mondays :)
};
<input type="text" ng-model="ctrl.someValue" ng-minlength="5" enable-validation="ctrl.shouldValidate">
var ctrl = this;
ctrl.someValue = 'hello';
ctrl.enabledValidators = {
required: false,
minlength: true,
'*': false // Disable other validators.
};
<input
type="text"
ng-model="ctrl.someValue"
required
ng-minlength="4"
ng-maxlength="6"
pattern="abcde"
enable-validation="ctrl.enabledValidators">
var ctrl = this;
ctrl.someValue = 'hello';
ctrl.enabledValidators = function() {
return {
required: false,
minlength: true,
'*': function() {
return new Date().getDay() == 2; // Other validators are only enabled on tuesday.
}
};
};
<input
type="text"
ng-model="ctrl.someValue"
required
ng-minlength="4"
ng-maxlength="6"
pattern="abcde"
enable-validation="ctrl.enabledValidators">
- Promises are not supported.