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