vote up 3 vote down star
1

Say I create a text element like this:

$firstName = new Zend_Form_Element_Text('firstName');
$firstName->setRequired(true);

Whats the best way to change the default error message from:

Value is empty, but a non-empty value is required

to a custom message? I read somewhere that to replace the message, just use addValidator(..., instead (NO setRequired), like this:

$firstName = new Zend_Form_Element_Text('firstName');
$firstName->addValidator('NotEmpty', false, array('messages'=>'Cannot be empty'));

but in my testing, this doesn't work - it doesn't validate at all - it will pass with an empty text field. Using both (addValidator('NotEmp.. + setRequired(true)) at the same time doesn't work either - it double validates, giving two error messages.

Any ideas?

Thanks!

flag

33% accept rate
Your findings are contrary to mine. $foo->setRequired(true)->addValidator('NotEmpty', false, array('messages' => 'bar')); works as expected, no double messages. – monzee Jan 20 at 8:02
ill post a new "Answer" in response to this because the my comment is apparently too long – dittonamed Jan 20 at 18:19

7 Answers

vote up 2 vote down

Give this a shot:

$firstName = new Zend_Form_Element_Text('firstName');
$firstName->setLabel('First Name')
    	  ->setRequired(true)
    	  ->addValidator('NotEmpty', true)
    	  ->addErrorMessage('Value is empty, but a non-empty value is required.');

The key is that "true" on the validator if you set that to true, it'll kill the other validations after it. If you add more than one validation method, but set that to false, it will validate all methods.

link|flag
great! addErrorMessage is what i was looking for. Though i was able to take out the "->addValidator('NotEmpty', true)" line. Thank you – dittonamed Jan 20 at 2:35
vote up 2 vote down

Try

->addValidator('Digits', false);

or

->addValidator('Digits');

You assume that to check Digits it has to have a string length anyway.

Also, I like to do some custom error messages like this:

$firstName->getValidator('NotEmpty')->setMessage('Please enter your first name');

This allows you to "get" the validator and then "set" properties of it.

link|flag
Your second suggestion works perfect - will change the message nicely and does what its supposed to. Thanks again – dittonamed Jan 20 at 3:08
One quirk worth mentioning... even though setRequired(true) is supposed to use NotEmpty class behind the scenes, you can't use getValidator('NotEmpty') if setRequired() is used alone without setValidator('NotEmpty... For the love of god, what a strange interface – dittonamed Jan 20 at 3:19
Moral of the story - Don't change the default error messages if your validating empty sets and others at the same time. – dittonamed Jan 20 at 3:23
Re: your second comment. That's because the setRequired() adds the NotEmpty validator at the very last minute, i.e. when calling isValid(). – monzee Jan 20 at 10:14
bummer. too bad this wont work: $firstName->setRequired(true, false, array('messages'=>'Must contain only letters')); – dittonamed Jan 20 at 19:27
vote up 1 vote down

An easier way to set this "site-wide" would be to possibly do the following in a bootstrap or maybe a base zend_controller:

<?php    
$translateValidators = array(
        				Zend_Validate_NotEmpty::IS_EMPTY => 'Value must be entered',
        				Zend_Validate_Regex::NOT_MATCH => 'Invalid value entered',
        				Zend_Validate_StringLength::TOO_SHORT => 'Value cannot be less than %min% characters',
        				Zend_Validate_StringLength::TOO_LONG => 'Value cannot be longer than %max% characters',
        				Zend_Validate_EmailAddress::INVALID => 'Invalid e-mail address'
        			);
    $translator = new Zend_Translate('array', $translateValidators);
    Zend_Validate_Abstract::setDefaultTranslator($translator);
?>
link|flag
Yeah but the link of errors is huge and will probably grow. Hopefully the custom error interface will change. It's too granular which would be ok if the default error messages were usable to present to users who aren't engineers. – joedevon Jul 23 at 4:26
vote up 0 vote down

One small issue. This code:

$zipCode->setLabel('Postal Code')
    	->addValidator('StringLength', true, array( 5, 5 ) )
    	->addErrorMessage('More than 5')
    	->addValidator('Digits', true)
    	->addErrorMessage('Not a digit');

Will generate both error messages if either validation fails. Isn't is supposed to stop after the first fails?

link|flag
1  
From what I've read, addErrorMessage() adds a general validation error message. It will appear regardless of which validator failed – monzee Jan 20 at 7:51
yeah that seems to be the case. i was hoping setting the second parameter to true in addValidator would prevent it from showing the next errors, but it didnt – dittonamed Jan 20 at 17:54
If that's true it could solve a problem I'm having...but can I set it from a form.ini file somehow? – joedevon Jul 23 at 4:27
vote up 0 vote down

But try this:

$firstName->setRequired(true)
          ->addValidator('NotEmpty', false, array('messages' => 'bar'))
          ->addValidator('Alpha', false, array('messages'=>'Must contain only letters'));

If left empty and submitted, itll give two messages bar & '' is an empty string. Its that second message thats coming from setRequired(true) thats the problem

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

$subjectElement->setRequired(true)->addErrorMessage('Please enter a subject for your message');

This works form me.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Try this..

$ausPostcode = new Zend_Form_Element_Text('aus_postcode'); $ausPostcode->setLabel('Australian Postcode')
->setRequired(true)
->addValidator('StringLength', false, array(4, 4))
->addValidator(new Zend_Validate_Digits(), false)
->getValidator('digits')->setMessage('Postcode can only contain digits');

This sets the custom error message only for the Digits validator.

Cheers JP.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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