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I have following view model field :

[Required]
[StringLength(9)]
[RegularExpression(@"\d{9}", ErrorMessageResourceName = "Number_Format", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(MyTypeOfResource))]
public string Number{ get; set; }

The Regular expression filter will take care of the input larger than 9 characters and right format and display its validation message, but the StringLength will display its own default error message as well. Removing the [StringLength(9)] will solve the problem of two different messages, but I assume this filter provides valuable information to SQL about the data type maximum size. Is there any other way ? Thanks,

2 Answers 2

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If you remove StringLength and have only:

[Required]
[RegularExpression(@"\d{9}", ErrorMessageResourceName = "Number_Format", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(MyTypeOfResource))]
public string Number{ get; set; }

You should be good. The RequiredAttribute will validate the property is set, and the RegularExpressionAttribute will validate that it is a string of 9 characters that are all digits.

edit:

Regarding the comment about assuming the filter provides valuable information to SQL... No, it's not meant to do this. DataAnnotations are meant to bridge the gab between client and presentation-layer validations. MVC does use DataAnnotations internally to validate a ViewModel, but a ViewModel is not necessarily (read: should not be) considered a domain model. A ViewModel is a model of what you want to display to a user while a domain model is usually representative of the data.

I wrote a blog a while ago that walks you through DataAnnotations within MVC 3 and how the framework turns them into unobtrusive JavaScript validations on the client side. It is definitely worth checking out.

Code is here and blog is here.

1

Change the StringLength attribute to include a blank error message, like so:

[StringLength(9, ErrorMessage = "")]
1
  • It seems the empty string does not work any more. I had to add at least a space. Dec 17, 2021 at 10:08

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