AndroidVerify


Source link: https://github.com/pchmn/AndroidVerify

AndroidVerify

Android library designed for rapid and customizable form validation.

Demo

Download sample-v1.0.2.apk

Setup

To use this library your minSdkVersion must be >= 15.

In your project level build.gradle :

allprojects {

  repositories {

...

maven {
 url "https://jitpack.io" 
}

  
}
 
}

 

In your app level build.gradle :

dependencies {

  compile 'com.github.pchmn:AndroidVerify:1.0.2' 
}

Usage

You can use AndroidVerify with any View that extends the original EditText (such as MaterialEditText for example).

With XML

You just have to wrap your EditText with an InputValidator view. Example for an email and a custom regex :

<com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator
  android:layout_width="wrap_content"
  android:layout_height="wrap_content"
  app:required="true"
  app:requiredMessage="Email required">

<EditText

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="wrap_content"

android:inputType="textEmailAddress"

android:hint="Email"/>  </com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator>

  <com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator
  android:layout_width="wrap_content"
  android:layout_height="wrap_content"
  app:regex="^[0-9]{
4
}
$"
  app:errorMessage="4 digits only">

<EditText

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="wrap_content"

android:hint="Regex 4 digits (custom error msg)"/>  </com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator>

InputValidator will automatically recognized textEmailAdress, phone and number inputType and use the appropriate validator, like in the example with the email field.
If you don't specify an errorMessage or a requiredMessage, predefined messages will be shown if the field is not valid.

Then validate your form :

// initiate from an activity // 'this' represents an Activity // you can specify if you want to show error messages or not Form form = new Form.Builder(this)
  .showErrors(true)
  .build();
  // or initiate from a fragment or from what you want by providing your own root view Form form = new Form.Builder(getContext(), rootView)
  .showErrors(true)
  .build();
  // validate the form if(form.isValid()) {

  // the form is valid 
}
 else {

  // the form is not valid 
}

  

With Java

You can create programmatically InputValidator without passing by XML ( see all Builder methods) :

// create the validator with the Builder // emailEditText is the EditText to validate  // 'this' represents a Context InputValidator emailValidator = new InputValidator.Builder(this)
  .on(emailEditText)
  .required(true)
  .validatorType(InputValidator.IS_EMAIL)
  .build();

// create the form and add the validator Form form = new Form.Builder(this)
  .addInputValidator(emailValidator)
  .build();

// validate the form if(form.isValid()) {

  // the form is valid 
}
 else {

  // the form is not valid 
}

You can create programmatically without using the Builders, but it is safer and quicker to use Builders.

Attributes

InputValidator

All the attributes that can be used with the InputValidator view. They can be used in XML or in Java with setters :

Attribute Type Description
app:required boolean Whether the field is required or not
app:validator enum Use a validator type predefined by FormValidator. You can use isEmail, isPhoneNumber, isNumeric, isUrl or isIP
app:minLength int The minimum length of the field
app:maxLength int The maximum length of the field
app:minValue int The minimum value of the field (must be numeric)
app:maxValue int The maximum value of the field (must be numeric)
app:regex string Use a regex to validate a field
app:identicalAs reference id The id of an EditText to which the field must be equal
app:errorMessage string The message to display if the field is not valid
app:requiredMessage string The message to display if the field is empty but was required. It implies that the field is required

Form

All the attributes that can be used with the Form view. They can be used in XML or in Java with setters :

Attribute Type Default Description
app:showErrors boolean true Whether the errors must be shown on each EditText or not

Advanced Usage

Use a custom validator

You can use a custom validator for an InputValidator :

// the InputValidator was present in the XML layout InputValidator inputValidator = (InputValidator) findViewById(R.id.input_validator);
 // your custom validator must extends AbstractValidator class inputValidator.setCustomValidator(new AbstractValidator() {

  @Override
  public boolean isValid(String value) {

return value.equals("ok man");

  
}

  @Override
  public String getErrorMessage() {

return "This field must be equals to 'ok man'";
  
}
 
}
);

// or create your InputValidator with the Builder InputValidator inputValidator = new InputValidator.Builder(this)
  .on(anEditText)
  .customValidator(new AbstractValidator() {

@Override

public boolean isValid(String value) {

 return value.equals("ok man");

}

 @Override

public String getErrorMessage() {

 return "This field must be equals to 'ok man'";

}

  
}
);

  .build();

Use the Form view in XML

If you want, you can use a Form view directly in XML. This view extends LinearLayout. It must wrap all the fields you want to check.

It can be useful for these reasons :

  • You don't have to instantiate a Form object before validate the form
  • It will be easier to identify a form in your XML layout
  • You can use two different and independent forms in the same XML layout

XML

 <!-- form1 -->
  <com.pchmn.androidverify.Form

android:id="@+id/form1"

android:orientation="vertical"

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="wrap_content"

app:showErrors="false">

 <!-- email -->

<com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator

 android:layout_width="wrap_content"

 android:layout_height="wrap_content">

  <EditText

  android:layout_width="match_parent"

  android:layout_height="wrap_content"

  android:inputType="textEmailAddress"

  android:hint="Email"/>

 </com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator>

 <!-- password -->

<com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator

 android:layout_width="wrap_content"

 android:layout_height="wrap_content"

 app:required="true"

 app:minLength="6">

  <EditText

  android:layout_width="match_parent"

  android:layout_height="wrap_content"

  android:inputType="textPassword"

  android:hint="Password (6 char. min) *" />

 </com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator>

</com.pchmn.androidverify.Form>
  <!-- /form1 -->

<!-- form2 -->
  <com.pchmn.androidverify.Form

android:id="@+id/form2"

android:orientation="vertical"

android:layout_width="match_parent"

android:layout_height="wrap_content">

 <!-- phone number -->

<com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator

 android:layout_width="wrap_content"

 android:layout_height="wrap_content"

 app:required="true">

  <EditText

  android:layout_width="match_parent"

  android:layout_height="wrap_content"

  android:inputType="phone"

  android:hint="Phone number *"/>

 </com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator>

 <!-- age -->

<com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator

 android:layout_width="wrap_content"

 android:layout_height="wrap_content"

 app:minValue="12">

  <EditText

  android:layout_width="match_parent"

  android:layout_height="wrap_content"

  android:inputType="number"

  android:hint="Age (12 min)" />

 </com.pchmn.androidverify.InputValidator>

</com.pchmn.androidverify.Form>
  <!-- /form2 -->

Validate the forms

// get the forms // you don't have to instantiate them because they already know the fields they have to validate Form form1 = (Form) findViewById(R.id.form1);
 Form form2 = (Form) findViewById(R.id.form2);
  // validate form1 if(form1.isValid()) {

  // form1 is valid 
}
  // validate form2 if(form2.isValid()) {

  // form2 is valid 
}
 

Builders method

It is recommended to use the builders to create Form and InputValidator views programmatically in order to prevent some errors. All the attributes for the two views are supported by the builders.

InputValidator builder

InputValidator inputValidator = new InputValidator.Builder(this)
  // methods
  .build();
Method Return value Description
InputValidator.Builder(Context context) InputValidator.Builder The constructor of the builder
on(EditText editText) InputValidator.Builder The EditText to validate
required(boolean required) InputValidator.Builder Whether the field is required or not
validatorType(int type) InputValidator.Builder Use a validator type predefined by FormValidator. You can use InputValidator.IS_EMAIL, InputValidator.IS_PHONE_NUMBER, InputValidator.IS_NUMERIC, InputValidator.IS_URL or InputValidator.IS_IP
customValidator(AbstractValidator validator) InputValidator.Builder Use a custom validator
minLength(int length) InputValidator.Builder The minimum length of the field
maxLength(int length) InputValidator.Builder The maximum length of the field
minValue(int value) InputValidator.Builder The minimum value of the field (must be numeric)
maxValue(int value) InputValidator.Builder The maximum value of the field (must be numeric)
regex(String regex) InputValidator.Builder Use a regex to validate a field
identicalAs(int id) InputValidator.Builder The id of an EditText to which the field must be equal
identicalAs(EditText editText)` InputValidator.Builder An other EditText to which the field must be equal
errorMessage(String message) InputValidator.Builder The message to display if the field is not valid
requiredMessage(String message) InputValidator.Builder The message to display if the field is empty but was required
build() InputValidator Create the InputValidator object

Form builder

Form form = new Form.Builder(this)
  // methods
  .build();
Method Return value Description
Form.Builder(Activity activity) Form.Builder First constructor of the builder
Form.Builder**(Context context, View rootView) Form.Builder Second constructor of the builder
Form.Builder(Context context) Form.Builder Third constructor of the builder. Be aware of possibly inflating errors using this constructor
addInputValidator(InputValidator validator) Form.Builder Add an InputValidator
showErrors(boolean show) Form.Builder Whether the errors must be shown on each EditText or not
build() Form Create the Form object

Sample

A sample app with some use cases of the library is available on this link

Credits

License

Copyright 2017 pchmn  Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
  http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0  Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. 

Resources

This plugin helps to:

  • Avoid problems with collaborators that do not stick to the defined SDK.
  • Removing the need to update the build.gradle file every time you update your android build-tools.

Floating hint for ProgressBar/SeekBar.

Using Recyclerview with the new Android Data Binding framework.

A set of custom views used to navigate between the pages (or indicate the current position) of a ViewPager from the Android Support Package.

This library allows you to embed a Barcode scanner as a Fragment.

Nammu is a simple library to speed up working with new Runtime Permissions introduced in Android M.

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