I'm using html5/Razor/MVC3 leveraging the Bootstrap template from Twitter. I want to have form validation that looks slick like they've documented (http://twitter.github.com/bootstrap/#forms). So if we take a look at how the standard boiler-plate MVC3 for account registration, the markup would look like:

@using (Html.BeginForm("Register", "Account", FormMethod.Post, new { @class="form-stacked" })) {
    @Html.ValidationSummary(true, "Snap! Something went wrong")
    <div>
        <fieldset>
            <legend>Account Information</legend>
            <div class="clearfix error">
                @Html.LabelFor(m => m.UserName)
                <div class="input">
                    @Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.UserName)
                    <span class="help-inline">@Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.UserName)</span>
                </div>
            </div>

            <div class="clearfix">
                @Html.LabelFor(m => m.Email)
                <div class="input">
                    @Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.Email)
                    <span class="help-inline">@Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.Email)</span>
                </div>
            </div>

            <div class="clearfix">
                @Html.LabelFor(m => m.Password)
                <div class="input">
                    @Html.PasswordFor(m => m.Password)
                    <span class="help-inline">@Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.Password)</span>
                </div>
            </div>

            <div class="clearfix">
                @Html.LabelFor(m => m.ConfirmPassword)
                <div class="input">
                    @Html.PasswordFor(m => m.ConfirmPassword)
                    <span class="help-inline">@Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.ConfirmPassword)</span>
                </div>
            </div>
        </fieldset>
        <div class="actions">
            <button class="btn large primary" type="submit">Register</button>
        </div>
    </div>

What I want to do is have the container div inject the "error" class like I've hard-coded in the first input. (So upon entering the page, the div would have a class of "clearfix" but if that input block failed validation, it would tag it as "clearfix error"). I figure I'm going to have to update the div block to include an id of some sort and perhaps add a new data- attribute to the ValidationMessage. I don't have a problem extending the ValidationMessageFor helper. I'm just not 100% sure what the approach should be for extending the library that's there. Any suggestions on how to approach this?

TIA.

UPDATE:

I am thinking this approach is reasonable:

<div id="UserNameContainer" class="clearfix error">
    @Html.LabelFor(m => m.UserName)
    <div class="input">
        @Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.UserName)
        <span class="help-inline">@Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.UserName, null, new { @data_container = "UserNameContainer" })</span>
    </div>
</div>

By decorating my validation message with a data-container name, I could then target the container div. Now I just need to figure out how to intercept the validation message.

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Have you managed to solve this? – Nelson Reis Nov 23 '11 at 15:17
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5 Answers

The $.validator.setDefaults method solved this issue for me with Bootstrap from Twitter. I'm using jquery.validate.js and jquery.validate.unobtrusive.js.

Since unobtrusive validation on DOM ready scans your document and caches unobtrusive validation options for each form it encounters, it is needed to call the $.validator.setDefaults method before document scan occurs.

// setup defaults for $.validator outside domReady handler
$.validator.setDefaults({
    highlight: function (element) {
        $(element).closest(".clearfix").addClass("error");
    },
    unhighlight: function (element) {
        $(element).closest(".clearfix").removeClass("error");
    }
});

$(document).ready(function() {
       // do other stuff
});
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1  
If you also like server errors highlighted use something like $('form .input-validation-error').closest(".clearfix").addClass("error"); on document ready. – Robert Massa Jan 19 at 20:08
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Rather than reinventing this particular wheel, check the validationEngine plugin available at http://www.position-absolute.com/articles/jquery-form-validator-because-form-validation-is-a-mess/.

You can customize the popup elements as you want, and it is trivial to connect to jQuery.validate.js.

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Came accross the same issue. I am tackling it by adding and extesion to the HtmlHelper Class.

This is what I did for the ValidationSummary:

   public static class TwitterBootstrapHelperExtensions
    {
        public static MvcHtmlString BootstrapValidationSummary(this HtmlHelper helper,
                               bool excludePropertyErrors,
                               string message)
        {
            if(helper.ViewData.ModelState.Values.All(v => v.Errors.Count == 0)) return new MvcHtmlString(string.Empty);

            string errorsList = "<ul>";
            foreach (var error in helper.ViewData.ModelState.Values.Where(v => v.Errors.Count >0))
            {
                errorsList += string.Format("<li>{0}</li>", error.Errors.First().ErrorMessage);
            }
            errorsList += "</ul>";
            return new MvcHtmlString(string.Format("<div class=\"alert-message error\"><span>{0}</span>{1}</div>",message,errorsList));

        }
    }

And in the .cshtml file I replace Html.ValidationSummary with this:

@Html.BootstrapValidationSummary(true, "Login was unsuccessful. Please correct the errors and try again.")

Remember to add the namespance of your extension class in the views folder web.config file.

I will post here later if I tackle the individual input item before you. HTH

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I did something similar--a "BootstrapValidationSummary" that could optionally be used. My code is pretty close to my original update, but I like what Germán proposed with jquery. – JBright Oct 18 '11 at 1:09
feedback

What I've done is taken the css classes for the validation errors and created a new css file with the same classes but with bootstrap values.

You can find it in a nuget package at: http://nuget.org/List/Packages/MahApps.Twitter.Bootstrap

That also provides some scaffolding templates to autocreate new views.

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I prefere to change the CSS of bootstrap. Just added the classes of jQuery validate in the right place. field-validation-error and input-validation-error

    form .clearfix.error > label, form .clearfix.error .help-block, form .clearfix.error .help-inline, .field-validation-error {
  color: #b94a48;
}
form .clearfix.error input, form .clearfix.error textarea, .input-validation-error {
  color: #b94a48;
  border-color: #ee5f5b;
}
form .clearfix.error input:focus, form .clearfix.error textarea:focus, .input-validation-error:focus {
  border-color: #e9322d;
  -webkit-box-shadow: 0 0 6px #f8b9b7;
  -moz-box-shadow: 0 0 6px #f8b9b7;
  box-shadow: 0 0 6px #f8b9b7;
}
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