205

In the new version of jQuery validation plugin 1.9 by default validation of hidden fields ignored. I'm using CKEditor for textarea input field and it hides the field and replace it with iframe. The field is there, but validation disabled for hidden fields. With validation plugin version 1.8.1 everything works as expected.

So my question is how to enable validation for hidden fields with v1.9 validation plugin.

This setting doesn't work:

$.validator.setDefaults({ ignore: '' });
3
  • 1
    See also stackoverflow.com/questions/7952181/…
    – goodeye
    Jul 5, 2014 at 19:33
  • The link for "validation of hidden fields ignored" is dead.
    – Beepye
    Sep 20, 2016 at 15:00
  • Validation is working by default for me with <input type="text" name="myfield" id="myfield" required="required" style="display: none;">. I didn't have to change any settings or do anything special. Sep 2, 2018 at 18:24

9 Answers 9

355

The plugin's author says you should use "square brackets without the quotes", []

http://bassistance.de/2011/10/07/release-validation-plugin-1-9-0/

Release: Validation Plugin 1.9.0: "...Another change should make the setup of forms with hidden elements easier, these are now ignored by default (option “ignore” has “:hidden” now as default). In theory, this could break an existing setup. In the unlikely case that it actually does, you can fix it by setting the ignore-option to “[]” (square brackets without the quotes)."

To change this setting for all forms:

$.validator.setDefaults({ 
    ignore: [],
    // any other default options and/or rules
});

(It is not required that .setDefaults() be within the document.ready function)

OR for one specific form:

$(document).ready(function() {

    $('#myform').validate({
        ignore: [],
        // any other options and/or rules
    });

});

EDIT:

See this answer for how to enable validation on some hidden fields but still ignore others.


EDIT 2:

Before leaving comments that "this does not work", keep in mind that the OP is simply asking about the jQuery Validate plugin and his question has nothing to do with how ASP.NET, MVC, or any other Microsoft framework can alter this plugin's normal expected behavior. If you're using a Microsoft framework, the default functioning of the jQuery Validate plugin is over-written by Microsoft's unobtrusive-validation plugin.

If you're struggling with the unobtrusive-validation plugin, then please refer to this answer instead: https://stackoverflow.com/a/11053251/594235

12
  • 29
    Maybe the down-voter can give me some constructive feedback. Otherwise, the answer is fully self-contained, properly sourced, gives code examples, and is technically correct as per the plugin's author.
    – Sparky
    Mar 17, 2013 at 0:41
  • 1
    @StijnVanBael, no, that is false. See: jsfiddle.net/F4w92/1 and also see my second comment on jerick's answer.
    – Sparky
    Jul 11, 2013 at 14:57
  • 4
    Well said @Sparky. The down-votes are probably kind of revenge, I've encountered the same..
    – Omar
    Jul 22, 2013 at 11:02
  • 1
    The JSFiddle doesn't work anymore because the libraries are loaded in HTTP instead of HTTPS. Updated version : jsfiddle.net/F4w92/31
    – hotips
    Jun 5, 2015 at 14:55
  • 1
    I downvoted also as this does not work for me using latest version, had to use: $("form").data("validator").settings.ignore = ""; as other answer from @James bellow
    – Mark Homer
    Oct 9, 2015 at 14:07
83

This worked for me, within an ASP.NET MVC3 site where I'd left the framework to setup unobtrusive validation etc., in case it's useful to anyone:

$("form").data("validator").settings.ignore = "";
6
  • 2
    I also like this one since it means I can do it in certain circumstances, rather than changing the default behaviour.
    – Steve Owen
    Oct 29, 2012 at 15:40
  • 6
    I had to do it this way, because using .validate() to change the options wasn't working.
    – Farinha
    Apr 4, 2014 at 13:01
  • 1
    this is the correct solution for the unobtrusive validation, I tried all the other solutions, they could work in case NOT using unobtrusive. If you are using unobtrusive here is right place. Nov 30, 2016 at 8:32
  • Had to use this method also for unobtrusive validation to work with Bootstrap Accordion
    – bsod_
    Jan 9, 2020 at 13:36
  • When I change it to this the form is not validated. I use unobtrusive .net core
    – Offir
    Jun 24, 2020 at 12:00
69

Make sure to put

 $.validator.setDefaults({ ignore: '' });

NOT inside $(document).ready

8
  • 2
    Excellent answer. A link to the documentation is good for people to learn, but a straight up answer is more valuable imo. He OP was on the right track, but putting it outside of $(document).ready is the trick.
    – Kevin Zych
    Feb 2, 2013 at 1:39
  • 4
    @KevinZych, Apparently, it makes absolutely no difference whether $.validator.setDefaults() is placed inside or outside of the DOM ready hander. Compare this jsFiddle to this jsFiddle.
    – Sparky
    Apr 9, 2013 at 20:40
  • Interesting @Sparky, your fiddles are excellent proof. I'd have to go back and look at the code I fixed using this solution and find out why I came to the conclusion that it had to be inside of the DOM ready handler. Must have been some other reason.
    – Kevin Zych
    Apr 10, 2013 at 3:26
  • Justin explains why running inside doc ready causes problems. However, this answer is not a good option because it's hard to guarantee that something outside doc ready will run BEFORE doc ready. Doc.ready will not wait for scripts outside of it to run. Nothing personal, but this isn't a reliable answer.
    – AaronLS
    Sep 9, 2013 at 18:55
  • Finally I have a answer..Thank you so much
    – sp9
    Jul 9, 2015 at 13:11
31

So I'm going to go a bit deeper in to why this doesn't work because I'm the kind of person that can't sleep at night without knowing haha. I'm using jQuery validate 1.10 and Microsoft jQuery Unobtrusive Validation 2.0.20710.0 which was published on 1/29/2013.

I started by searching for the setDefaults method in jQuery Validate and found it on line 261 of the unminified file. All this function really does is merge your json settings in to the existing $.validator.defaults which are initialized with the ignore property being set to ":hidden" along with the other defaults defined in jQuery Validate. So at this point we've overridden ignore. Now let's see where this defaults property is being referenced at.

When I traced through the code to see where $.validator.defaults is being referenced. I noticed that is was only being used by the constructor for a form validator, line 170 in jQuery validate unminified file.

// constructor for validator
$.validator = function( options, form ) {
    this.settings = $.extend( true, {}, $.validator.defaults, options );
    this.currentForm = form;
    this.init();
};

At this point a validator will merge any default settings that were set and attach it to the form validator. When you look at the code that is doing the validating, highlighting, unhighlighting, etc they all use the validator.settings object to pull the ignore property. So we need to make sure if we are to set the ignore with the setDefaults method then it has to occur before the $("form").validate() is called.

If you're using Asp.net MVC and the unobtrusive plugin, then you'll realize after looking at the javascript that validate is called in document.ready. I've also called my setDefaults in the document.ready block which is going to execute after the scripts, jquery validate and unobtrusive because I've defined those scripts in the html before the one that has the call in it. So my call obviously had no impact on the default functionality of skipping hidden elements during validation. There is a couple of options here.

Option 1 - You could as Juan Mellado pointed out have the call outside of the document.ready which would execute as soon as the script has been loaded. I'm not sure about the timing of this since browsers are now capable of doing parallel script loading. If I'm just being over cautious then please correct me. Also, there's probably ways around this but for my needs I did not go down this path.

Option 2a - The safe bet in my eyes is to just replace the $.validator.setDefaults({ ignore: '' }); inside of the document.ready event with $("form").data("validator").settings.ignore = "";. This will modify the ignore property that is actually used by jQuery validate when doing each validation on your elements for the given form.

Options 2b - After looking in to the code a bit more you could also use $("form").validate().settings.ignore = ""; as a way of setting the ignore property. The reason is that when looking at the validate function it checks to see if a validator object has already been stored for the form element via the $.data() function. If it finds a validator object stored with the form element then it just returns the validator object instead of creating another one.

2
  • Good work as the OP answer didn't work for me in MVC 5
    – Mark Homer
    Oct 9, 2015 at 14:36
  • your analysis helped me a lot in fixing one my validation issues. +1
    – pgcan
    May 3, 2016 at 6:11
18

This worked for me within an ASP.NET site. To enable validation on some hidden fields use this code

$("form").data("validator").settings.ignore = ":hidden:not(#myitem)";

To enable validation for all elements of form use this one $("form").data("validator").settings.ignore = "";

Note that use them within $(document).ready(function() { })

9

Just added ignore: [] in the specific page for the specific form, this solution worked for me.

$("#form_name").validate({
        ignore: [],
        onkeyup: false,
        rules: {            
        },      
        highlight:false,
    });
2

This is working for me.

jQuery("#form_name").validate().settings.ignore = "";
0

The validation was working for me on form submission, but it wasn't doing the reactive event driven validation on input to the chosen select lists.

To fix this I added the following to manually trigger the jquery validation event that gets added by the library:

$(".chosen-select").each(function() {
  $(this).chosen().on("change", function() {
    $(this).parents(".form-group").find("select.form-control").trigger("focusout.validate");
  });
});

jquery.validate will now add the .valid class to the underlying select list.

Caveat: This does require a consistent html pattern for your form inputs. In my case, each input filed is wrapped in a div.form-group, and each input has .form-control.

-18

Just find the text ignore: ":hidden" in your jquery validation file and comment it. After comment this it will never loss any hidden elements to validate...

Thanks

1
  • 6
    Never a good idea to just randomly comment out code in a third party library.
    – Jacques
    Oct 12, 2015 at 13:45

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