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I am using Rails 3.2 and Devise. I am wondering if Devise provides an "Email (address) Confirmation" field just like Password Confirmation for the user to type in a Password field and then type in a Password Confirmation field before the website sends out a confirmation email or processes the sign up registration. If not, must I add a email_confirmation and validate the User model (after rails g devise User)?

Thanks in advance

4 Answers 4

14

I haven't found if devise does what you ask (the question is referring to a second :email_confirmation field similar to :password_confirmation, 'confirmable' seems to be solely related to confirmation links). I had to do this as well and I figured out how to do it using builtin active record validation (rails 3.2.8, devise 2.1.2):

  1. In your model add confirmation: true to your email validation and :email_confirmation to attr_accessible.
  2. In your view add an :email_confirmation field.

As an example, in your model (not assuming other validations or attr_accessibles):

attr_accessible :email, :email_confirmation
validates :email, confirmation: true

which will use the builtin active record 'confirmation' validation (the same as for passwords). Finally, in your view(s) you'll need to add something like:

<div><%= f.label :email_confirmation %>
<%= f.email_field :email_confirmation %></div>

There may be a cleaner way but this worked for me. However, my only experience with devise so far has been when adding it to existing models, I haven't used it when it's generating the models for you (presumably it's mostly the same).

0
2

I was faced with the same issue.

Here's how I solved it

From the official RailsGuide

You should use this helper when you have two text fields that should receive exactly the same content. For example, you may want to confirm an email address or a password. This validation creates a virtual attribute whose name is the name of the field that has to be confirmed with "_confirmation" appended.

class Person < ApplicationRecord
  validates :email, confirmation: true
end

In your view template you could use something like

<%= text_field :person, :email %>
<%= text_field :person, :email_confirmation %>

This check is performed only if email_confirmation is not nil. To require confirmation, make sure to add a presence check for the confirmation attribute (we'll take a look at presence later on in this guide):

class Person < ApplicationRecord
  validates :email, confirmation: true
  validates :email_confirmation, presence: true
end

There is also a :case_sensitive option that you can use to define whether the confirmation constraint will be case sensitive or not. This option defaults to true.

class Person < ApplicationRecord
  validates :email, confirmation: { case_sensitive: false }
end

The default error message for this helper is "doesn't match confirmation".

From my experimentation, using the official RailsGuide,

If you want to change the confirmation message to say, Email confirmation must be given correctly, then use add a message option this way:

class Person < ApplicationRecord
  validates :email, confirmation: true
  validates :email_confirmation, presence: { message: "must be given correctly" }
end

That's all.

I hope this helps

0

There are a few minor differences for newer versions of Rails compared to the original answer. Just figured I'd add this in case it helps anyone else.

Add an attr_accessor for email_confirmation to your model and validate the email field against the email_confirmation field. Set case_sensitive to false { case_sensitive: false } on the validation unless you have configured the email field to be case sensitive.

app/models/user.rb

class User < ApplicationRecord
  attr_accessor :email_confirmation
  validates :email, confirmation: { case_sensitive: false }
end

Permit email_confirmation on the sign up params.

app/controllers/users/registrations_controller.rb

def configure_sign_up_params
  devise_parameter_sanitizer.permit(:sign_up, keys: [:email_confirmation])
end

Add the email_confirmation field to your sign up form.

app/views/devise/registrations/new.html.erb

<%= form_for(resource, as: resource_name, url: registration_path(resource_name)) do |f| %>
  <%= render 'devise/shared/error_messages', resource: resource %>

  <div class="field">
    <%= f.label :email %>
    <%= f.email_field :email, autofocus: true, autocomplete: 'email', required: true %>
  </div>

  <div class="field">
    <%= f.label :email_confirmation %>
    <%= f.email_field :email_confirmation, required: true %>
  </div>

  <!-- other fields -->
<% end %>
-3

Assuming you have the gem installed, when you perform this function :

rails generate devise:install

It will generate your migration file that will contain your email_confirmation stuff that you will need to go in the direction you're referring to. All you have to do is not comment it out. Otherwise, I comment out all the other stuff that I don't need.

The module you are referring to is called confirmable

Assuming you havn't found this yet, this link will explain the rest :

How do I set up email confirmation with Devise?

2
  • This does not answer his question. He is looking for an :email_confirmation field in the signup form that works just like the :password_confirmation field.
    – Scott W
    Aug 30, 2013 at 20:09
  • This answer is incorrect I'm afraid; the 'confirmable' module sends emails that require the user to click a link to confirm the account before it can be used, which the questioner is asking if it is possible to automatically add a second email field that must match the first for validation to pass. Sep 11, 2013 at 15:21

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