vote up 1 vote down star

Hi I did register form in with zend form

$password = new Zend_Form_Element_Password('password');
$password->setLabel($this->_translate->_("Password:"))
    ->setRequired(true)
    ->addValidator('stringLength', true, array(4, 32));

$confirmPassword = new Zend_Form_Element_Password('confirmpassword');
$confirmPassword->setLabel($this->_translate->_("Confirm Password:"))
    					->setRequired(true);

I control password and confirmpassword in controller. if password and confirmpassword don't match then add error message under confirmpassword textbox. how i do?

flag

3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

The concept basically boils down to adding a Zend_Validate_Identical validator to the 'confirmpassword' field, using the data from the $this->_request->getParam('password') to test against. I use a custom method on an extended Zend_Form to process the post data from all my forms, it isn't an exact solution for you, but perhaps my code from my "EditUser" form can point you in the right direction.

From the controller:

// $form is a MW_Form_EditUser.

if ($this->_request->isPost() && $form->process($this->_request->getPost()))
{
   // successful form - redirect or whatever here
}

From the MW_Form_EditUser class:

public function process(array $data)
{
 // gets a copy of the user we are editing
 $user = $this->getEditable();
 // checks to see if the user we are editing is ourself
 $isSelf = ($user->id == MW_Auth::getInstance()->getUser()->id);

 // if the new_pass field is non-empty, add validators for confirmation of password
 if (!empty($data['new_pass']))
 {
   $this->new_pass2->setAllowEmpty(false)->addValidator(
       new Zend_Validate_Identical($data['new_pass'])
     );
   if ($curpass = $this->current_password) $curpass->setAllowEmpty(false);
 }

 if ($this->delete && !empty($data["delete"])) {
   $this->delete->setValue(true);
   $user->delete();
   return true;
 }

 if ($this->isValid($data))
 {
   /// saves the data to the user
   $user->email = $this->email->getValue();
   $user->name = $this->name->getValue();
   if ($password = $this->new_pass->getValue()) $user->password = $password;
   if (!$isSelf)
   {
     if ($this->super->getValue()) {
       $user->setGroups(array(MW_Auth_Group_Super::getInstance()));
     } else {
       $user->setGroups(array(MW_Auth_Group_User::getInstance()));              
     }                    
   }
   $user->save();
   return true;
 }
 return false;
}
link|flag
I think, it's better to not be confusing: to name function isValid(), create in it Zend_Validate_Identical and just return parent::isValid(). This solution is more natural and needs less code – valya Nov 8 at 16:47
vote up 1 vote down

A clean solution would be to create a custom Validator class

From the Zend Framework Reference Guide:

class My_Validate_PasswordConfirmation extends Zend_Validate_Abstract
{
    const NOT_MATCH = 'notMatch';

    protected $_messageTemplates = array(
        self::NOT_MATCH => 'Password confirmation does not match'
    );

    public function isValid($value, $context = null)
    {
        $value = (string) $value;
        $this->_setValue($value);

        if (is_array($context)) {
            if (isset($context['password'])
                && ($value == $context['password']))
            {
                return true;
            }
        } elseif (is_string($context) && ($value == $context)) {
            return true;
        }

        $this->_error(self::NOT_MATCH);
        return false;
    }
}

The $context variable allows the validator to access other form fields to perform validation.

You'd then type:

$confirmPassword->addValidator('My_Validate_PasswordConfirmation');

This method ensures better separation of concerns - it's probably not something that should be dealt with in your controller.

Hope that helps.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Using Zend_Validate_Identical is a good solution for you by Zend. I will give you another choice. jQuery. When you are using Zend_Validate_Identical form will go to the server and server will validate it. If passwords are not same it will return an error message. If you use jQuery form will not go to the server unless passwords are same.

link|flag
You have to have server side validation while client side validation is nice to have. Client side without server side is useless. – smack0007 Nov 8 at 18:27

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.