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I'm embarking on learning about validators in rails and have run into the following issue.

I have a series of form fields on the app that I'm working on. I've noticed that if I use a validator native to rails such as validates :pin_number, length: { is: 6 }, it goes and puts a nice little message next to the form field in question: <span class="error">is the wrong length (should be 6 characters)</span> Awesome!

However, when I created the custom validator below to check the value of :pin_number, my error message, though it appeared at the top, didn't appear next to the field that was in violation.

#from my controller hp_id.rb
validates :pin_number, pin: true

#from my custom validator in app/validators/pin_validator.rb
class PinValidator < ActiveModel::EachValidator
  def validate_each (record, attribute, value)
    if value > 9999
     record.errors[attribute] << (options[:message] || "validator working")
    end
  end
end

I looked around online and, while I did find suggestions for editing the input fields to display validation errors, this approach seemed sloppy as certain rails validators already have this functionality without any modification to the view.

My Question is how do I take advantage of the existing framework to render a <span class="error"> message with my own custom validator?

Any insight appreciated!

1 Answer 1

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In your case you can write all in one line and add your custom message in this way:

#Model
validates_numericality_of :pin, :only_integer =>true, 
                          :less_than => 9999, 
                          :message => "Your custom message"
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  • Thanks for the reply. Ultimately my intention is to add a custom message to a custom validator, not to an existing one. The greater-than less-than test is, itself, just a convenient way of seeing if it's working. Dec 9, 2014 at 14:56

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