I'm trying to validate different parts of a form separately. Unfortunately, the form is generated by a CMS, so I'm limited in my manipulation.
I've tried creating an array of validate
objects, using the current form section as an index. Ie:
//initialize validation
validators = [
$('#donation_amount').validate({ rules:{ amount: { required: true } } }),
$('#personal_information').validate({ rules:{ Street: { required: true } } })
];
and shifting through the sections like so:
$('#btn-next').click(function() {
//if validation is true, show next page
if (validators[curOrder].valid()) {
var old = $('.active');
var oldOrder = old.attr('data-order');
var newOrder = parseInt(oldOrder) + 1;
old.removeClass('active');
$("[data-order='" + newOrder + "']").addClass('active');
curOrder = newOrder;
}else{
console.log("invalid");
}
});
The validation, however, is always returning true
.
Here's the page in question: https://salsa3.salsalabs.com/o/50388/p/salsa/donation/common/public/?donate_page_KEY=8461
.validate()
inside aclick
handler. It's meant to initialize the form and should be inside thedocument.ready
instead. When you need to test the form inside events, use.valid()
which will return a true/false. Otherwise, there are events already built into.validate()
that you can use. See: this, this, and this.validate()
on all forms once, and use.valid()
to test the form upon clicking thenext
button.form
that you can validate separately. Otherwise, you are dealing with something that's very unnecessarily complex.