5

how can I use a Required Validation in a property Prop2 only if the Prop1 is true?

Ex:
public bool Prop1 { get; set; }

[Required] // I need this validation only if the Prop1 is true.
public string Prop2 { get; set; }

Any idea? I need on client and server side. Thanks

3 Answers 3

7

You could use MVC FoolProof Validation framework

It has useful feature like

[RequiredIf]
[RequiredIfNot]
[RequiredIfTrue]
[RequiredIfFalse]
[RequiredIfEmpty]
[RequiredIfNotEmpty]
[RequiredIfRegExMatch]
[RequiredIfNotRegExMatch]

[Is]
[EqualTo]
[NotEqualTo]
[GreaterThan]
[LessThan]
[GreaterThanOrEqualTo]
[LessThanOrEqualTo]

Hope this would help you!

4

There are two parts to this. First, you have to write a required attribute that's only required if the other property meets your criteria.

You'd have to do something like:

public class RequiredComparerAttribute : RequiredAttribute
{
    public OtherProperty { get; set; }
    public override bool IsValid(object value)
    {
        // TODO: use reflection to validate other property as PropertyInfo 
        // or validate it's value after it is decided to be valid

        foreach (ValidationAttribute va in property
            .GetCustomAttributes(typeof(ValidationAttribute), true)
            .OfType<ValidationAttribute>())
        {
            if (!va.IsValid(value))
            {
                return false; // not required
            }
        }
        return  true; // required
    }
}

Then, in Application_Start in the Global.asax, you'll have to register the validator, which you can just reuse the RequiredAttribute's validator:

        DataAnnotationsModelValidatorProvider
            .RegisterAdapter(typeof(RequiredComparerAttribute),
              typeof(RequiredAttributeAdapter));

If you want to add your own validator, you'll have to write a custom validator. Phil Haack has an example on his blog: http://haacked.com/archive/2009/11/19/aspnetmvc2-custom-validation.aspx

Edit: Take a look at CompareAttribute in .NET Reflector for a sense of how to get the value of the OtherProperty. CompareAttribute also implements IClientValidatable to provide those validation rules needed on the client side.

I don't think CompareAttribute will work for you because you have to validate that a value is required based on content of another property, not compare the equality of two properties.

Edit2: What does the Validation provider do?

It adds rules to the form and provides messages for those rules. You can see exactly how the RequiredAttributeAdapter does this by downloading the MVC 3 source. To understand what it does on the client side, you can open the MVC 3 page in Google Chrome, hit CTRL+SHIFT+J to bring up a developer tools window and enter:

$('form:first').data().unobtrusiveValidation.options

The rules object inside options specifies how to validate each item and the message object specifies the error message that will be displayed for each validation error.

Edit3: Full example

Since answering this question, I've written a blog post with a full example of creating a custom attribute on the client (unobtrusive validation) and server. The blog post is here. This example is for a 'contains' attribute, but it should be pretty easy to modify to become a required comparison.

3
  • Thanks, but I think that a custom validator is the best way. :)
    – Cesar
    Mar 21, 2011 at 20:09
  • @Cesar: inheriting from CustomValidationAttribute is probably the way to go so you don't have to do the reflection piece, but this post tells you exactly how to implement a server-side and client-side "custom validator". If you mean a validation rule on the client side, here is a good explanation of those: bradwilson.typepad.com/blog/2010/10/… Mar 21, 2011 at 20:30
  • I wrote a blog post about how to create a custom DataAnnotations attribute for validation on both the client and the server. Read it here and source code here May 17, 2012 at 13:56
0

You can write a custom validator do to this job.

Let me know if you need help to do it.

3
  • CustomValidator is for WebForms. He's asking about DataAnnotations in MVC. Mar 21, 2011 at 20:31
  • 1
    What?! You don't know that you can write your custom validator and use it in MVC?! Watch this BradWilson presentation and learn! bradwilson.typepad.com/blog/2011/02/…
    – Zote
    Mar 22, 2011 at 12:08
  • 2
    I'm saying a CustomValidator msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… is different than the rules you add to the jQuery validation plugin. By adding a validation provider, as in my answer, you're specifying the rules that are added. These are parsed by jQuery on DOM ready. Adding a single validation script isn't as flexible or reusable as allowing the DataAnnotations framework to generate these rules for you. Mar 22, 2011 at 15:20

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