Personally I would tend to use the approach Darin Dimitrov showed in his solution.
This frees you up to be able to use the data annotation approach with validation AND have separate data attributes on each ViewModel corresponding to the task at hand.
To minimize the amount of work for copying between model and viewmodel you should look at AutoMapper or ValueInjecter. Both have their individual strong points, so check them both.
Another possible approach for you would be to derive your viewmodel or model from IValidatableObject. This gives you the option to implement a function Validate.
In validate you can return either a List of ValidationResult elements or issue a yield return for each problem you detect in validation.
The ValidationResult consists of an error message and a list of strings with the fieldnames. The error messages will be shown at a location near the input field(s).
public IEnumerable<ValidationResult> Validate(ValidationContext validationContext)
{
if( NumberField < 0 )
{
yield return new ValidationResult(
"Don't input a negative number",
new[] { "NumberField" } );
}
if( NumberField > 100 )
{
yield return new ValidationResult(
"Don't input a number > 100",
new[] { "NumberField" } );
}
yield break;
}
RequiredAttrcompletely and do a server side check when you need to. But this would be tricky on the client – gideon Mar 20 '11 at 7:45