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Start your free trialRolando Bernal
18,105 PointsAfter added jQuery.Validate.Bootstrap.js validation, "Duration" field's still allowing value of "0" in client-validation
After we added jQuery.Validate.Bootstrap.js validation, the "Duration" field's still allowing value of "0" in client-validation, why? How can we make sure that said field behaves the same way than the "Activity" field using our custom validation in the client-side?
3 Answers
James Churchill
Treehouse TeacherRolando,
As you noticed, our validation that checks if the "Duration" field value is greater than "0" is only implemented on the server-side. That being said, it is possible to create a custom validation attribute that will work both on the server and client, though doing so will require that you write some JavaScript code.
This article on the official ASP.NET MVC website contains a section on how to create a custom validation attribute, including how to implement the IClientModelValidator
interface on your custom validation attribute class.
https://docs.asp.net/en/latest/mvc/models/validation.html#client-side-validation
Thanks ~James
Rolando Bernal
18,105 PointsThank you, James. That article helped. Great work on the course!
Victor Johnson
24,294 PointsYou could also use the 'Range' annotation to show an error similar to what you are seeing on the Activity field.
What I used was as follows: [Range(1, int.MaxValue, ErrorMessage ="The Duration field must be greater than 0")]
This means, the minimum value you can have in the field is 1, the maximum value you can have in the maximum value of a integer, and the error message is straight-forward. If you place this above the Duration property, you will see the error on the client-side if the value does not meet this criteria.
James Churchill
Treehouse TeacherVictor,
That's a great idea! Though you probably should switch to using doubles to specify your range values since that's the data type that's used in the underlying model property.
[Range(1.0, double.MaxValue, ErrorMessage ="The Duration field must be greater than 0")]
Something to note about this solution, is that it wouldn't allow for values that fall between "0" and "1", though that's a minor issue, since it's not likely that an exercise activity's duration would be less than a minute.
Thanks ~James