vote up 2 vote down star

I want to do preliminary check if entered string looks like Vehicle Identification Number (VIN). I know what it consists of 17 letters and digits, but letters I, O and Q are not allowed inside VIN, so I use this regular expression:

^[0-9A-Z-[IOQ]]{17}$

Now if I check a string like 1G1FP22PXS2100001 with RegularExpressionValidator it fails, but CustomValidator with this OnServerValidate event handler

Regex r = new Regex("^[0-9A-Z-[IOQ]]{17}$");
args.IsValid = r.IsMatch(TextBox1.Text);

works well.

Experiments show what RegularExpressionValidator doesn't support Character Class Subtraction, but Regex class does.

Now I am interested why do these two .NET classes use different regex flavors? Is it documented somethere?

flag

I just put the links directly in my answer instead of "hiding them" in the comments. – VonC Dec 4 '08 at 8:52

2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

The RegularExpressionValidator also supports client-side validation using JavaScript, where the JavaScript Regex engine is used. The difference you see is the difference between the JavaScript and the .NET regex implementation. You can disable client-side validation and thus force the validator to use the .NET regex engine, at the price of the additional post-back.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Not a direct answer but just an obvious remark:

If for some reason Character class subtraction is not supported, you always can use as a workaround:

^[0-9A-HJ-NPR-Z]{17}$


To document what I put in the comments of this question:

The article How to: Validate Against Patterns for ASP.NET Server Controls, does mention that the javascript client-side regex validator does not know "character class subtraction"

As mentionned in RegularExpressionValidator Class .Net documentation:

Both server-side and client-side validation are performed unless the browser does not support client-side validation or client-side validation is explicitly disabled (by setting the EnableClientScript property to false).

The regular-expression validation implementation is slightly different on the client than on the server. On the client, JScript regular-expression syntax is used.
On the server, System.Text.RegularExpressions..::.Regex syntax is used.
JScript regular expression syntax is a subset of System.Text.RegularExpressions..::.Regex syntax.
It is therefore recommended that JScript regular-expression syntax should be used in order to yield the same results on both the client and the server.

Another illustration of that side-effect (different regex flavors between server and client sides) is mentionned in RegularExpressionValidator woes blog entry.

link|flag
IMHO, that's not the workaround, thats the only way to do it. I'm unaware that a thing like "character class subtraction" even exists. Or does it in some really weird regex flavor? – Tomalak Dec 4 '08 at 7:49
It does, since 2004, in .Net regex engine, but as pointed out by msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…, the javascript client-side regex validator does not know "character class subtraction"... – VonC Dec 4 '08 at 7:54
As mentionned in msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…, on the client, JScript regular-expression syntax is used. On the server, System.Text.RegularExpressions..::.Regex syntax is used. => JScript regular-expression syntax should be used. – VonC Dec 4 '08 at 7:58
Another illustration of that side-effect (different regex flavors between server and client sides) is mentionned in weblogs.asp.net/cosgood/archive/… – VonC Dec 4 '08 at 7:59
VonC: So, this behaviour is documented. Thanks! – Alexander Prokofyev Dec 4 '08 at 8:42

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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