There are 2 different Settings in Web.config
that are coupled, but not synonymous.
<add key="ClientValidationEnabled" value="false"/>
Determines whether or not Client Validation is enabled. If the value is set to false, your model annotations (required, min, max
, etc) will not create client-side attributes or behaviors.
<add key="UnobtrusiveJavaScriptEnabled" value="true"/>
Determines whether ASP.NET will use JQuery for client side Asynchronous tasks, or raw JavaScript.
If UnobtrusiveJavaScriptEnabled=false
, your Client-Side Validation will still work, but will use Raw JavaScript over JQuery.
What is significance of using JQuery over JavaScript?
Some environments choose not to use JQuery. They have heavily customized UI frameworks. JQuery may already be in use in a custom fashion. Or a different JS library may be in use for all Asynchronous enhancement
What are dis-advantages of using raw JavaScript?
Your Ajax helpers will not work without JQuery (UnobtrusiveJavaScriptEnabled).
Raw JavaScript is messy and fills up your markup with a lot of stuff. JQuery creates lighter and cleaner markup. (The advantage of "lighter ajax attributes")
Your raw Javascript will be less robust, and possibly less efficient. Keep in mind, the ASP.NET JavaScript libraries have not evolved in 3 years (long before the release of MVC 3).
In Conclusion:
If you want to disable Client-Side validation, set
<add key="ClientValidationEnabled" value="false"/>
But I recommend you leave ClientValidationEnabled
set to true
. If you don't decorate your model with validation annotation, the framework won't render validation attributes. Best to leave your options open and decide for each View / ViewModel where to use Client-Side Validation.
I recommend against disabling UnobtrusiveJavaScriptEnabled. There are too many subtle ways JQuery is used by ASP.NET MVC Framework. And this will not disable Client-Side validation.
Important Note: Don't delete either entry. If you want to disable one, just set it to false
. By deleting either entry, you leave yourself at the mercy of the Framework's default behavior (which may change over time).