I looked up the source code of Blink. Keep in mind I never saw it before today, so I might be completely off.
Assuming I found the right place -
For type="url"
fields there is URLInputType
, with the code:
bool URLInputType::typeMismatchFor(const String& value) const
{
return !value.isEmpty() && !KURL(KURL(), value).isValid();
}
typeMismatchFor
is called from HTMLInputElement::isValidValue
bool HTMLInputElement::isValidValue(const String& value) const
{
if (!m_inputType->canSetStringValue()) {
ASSERT_NOT_REACHED();
return false;
}
return !m_inputType->typeMismatchFor(value) // <-- here
&& !m_inputType->stepMismatch(value)
&& !m_inputType->rangeUnderflow(value)
&& !m_inputType->rangeOverflow(value)
&& !tooLong(value, IgnoreDirtyFlag)
&& !m_inputType->patternMismatch(value)
&& !m_inputType->valueMissing(value);
}
KURL
seems like a proper implementation of a URL, used everywhere in Blink.
In comparison, the implementation for EmailInputType
, typeMismatchFor
calls isValidEmailAddress
, which does use a regex:
static const char emailPattern[] =
"[a-z0-9!#$%&'*+/=?^_`{|}~.-]+" // local part
"@"
"[a-z0-9-]+(\\.[a-z0-9-]+)*"; // domain part
static bool isValidEmailAddress(const String& address)
{
int addressLength = address.length();
if (!addressLength)
return false;
DEFINE_STATIC_LOCAL(const RegularExpression, regExp,
(emailPattern, TextCaseInsensitive));
int matchLength;
int matchOffset = regExp.match(address, 0, &matchLength);
return !matchOffset && matchLength == addressLength;
}
These elements and more can be found on the /html folder. It seems most of them are using proper parsing and checking of the input, not regular expressions.