diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'src')
| -rw-r--r-- | src/Angular.js | 63 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | src/validators.js | 56 |
2 files changed, 112 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/src/Angular.js b/src/Angular.js index 0e26a829..9177853a 100644 --- a/src/Angular.js +++ b/src/Angular.js @@ -93,6 +93,59 @@ var _undefined = undefined, angularAttrMarkup = extensionMap(angular, 'attrMarkup'), angularDirective = extensionMap(angular, 'directive'), angularWidget = extensionMap(angular, 'widget', lowercase), + + /** + * @ngdoc overview + * @name angular.validator + * @namespace Namespace for all filters. + * @description + * # Overview + * Validators are a standard way to check the user input against a specific criteria. For + * example, you might need to check that an input field contains a well-formed phone number. + * + * # Syntax + * Attach a validator on user input widgets using the `ng:validate` attribute. + * + * <WIKI:SOURCE> + * Change me: <input type="text" name="number" ng:validate="integer" value="123"> + * </WIKI:SOURCE> + * + * # Writing your own Validators + * Writing your own validator is easy. To make a function available as a + * validator, just define the JavaScript function on the `angular.validator` + * object. <angular/> passes in the input to validate as the first argument + * to your function. Any additional validator arguments are passed in as + * additional arguments to your function. + * + * You can use these variables in the function: + * + * * `this` — The current scope. + * * `this.$element` — The DOM element containing the binding. This allows the filter to manipulate + * the DOM in addition to transforming the input. + * + * In this example we have written a upsTrackingNo validator. + * It marks the input text "valid" only when the user enters a well-formed + * UPS tracking number. + * + * <pre> + * angular.validator('upsTrackingNo', function(input, format) { + * var regexp = new RegExp("^" + format.replace(/9/g, '\\d') + "$"); + * return input.match(regexp) ? "" : "The format must match " + format; + * }); + * </pre> + * + * @example + * <script> + * angular.validator('upsTrackingNo', function(input, format) { + * var regexp = new RegExp("^" + format.replace(/9/g, '\\d') + "$"); + * return input.match(regexp)?"":"The format must match " + format; + * }); + * </script> + * <input type="text" name="trackNo" size="40" + * ng:validate="upsTrackingNo:'1Z 999 999 99 9999 999 9'" + * value="1Z 123 456 78 9012 345 6"/> + * + */ angularValidator = extensionMap(angular, 'validator'), @@ -139,13 +192,13 @@ var _undefined = undefined, * You can use these variables in the function: * * * `this` — The current scope. - * * `$element` — The DOM element containing the binding. This allows the filter to manipulate + * * `this.$element` — The DOM element containing the binding. This allows the filter to manipulate * the DOM in addition to transforming the input. * * * @example <script type="text/javascript"> - angular.filter.reverse = function(input, uppercase, color) { + angular.filter('reverse', function(input, uppercase, color) { var out = ""; for (var i = 0; i < input.length; i++) { out = input.charAt(i) + out; @@ -157,7 +210,7 @@ var _undefined = undefined, this.$element.css('color', color); } return out; - }; + }); </script> The following example filter reverses a text string. In addition, it conditionally makes the text upper-case (to demonstrate optional arguments) and assigns color (to demonstrate DOM @@ -169,10 +222,6 @@ var _undefined = undefined, <span ng:non-bindable="true">{{"hello"|reverse:true:"blue"}}</span>: {{"hello"|reverse:true:"blue"}} - * @TODO: I completely dropped a mention of using the other option (setter method), it's - * confusing to have two ways to do the same thing. I just wonder if we should prefer using the - * setter way over direct assignment because in the future we might want to be able to intercept - * filter registrations for some reason. */ angularFilter = extensionMap(angular, 'filter'), angularFormatter = extensionMap(angular, 'formatter'), diff --git a/src/validators.js b/src/validators.js index fd18d66c..a1543f41 100644 --- a/src/validators.js +++ b/src/validators.js @@ -84,6 +84,62 @@ extend(angularValidator, { } }, + /** + * @ngdoc validator + * @name angular.validator.asynchronous + * @description + * Use asynchronous validator if the validation can not be computed + * immediately, but is provided through a callback. The widget + * automatically shows a spinning indicator while the validity of + * the widget is computed. This validator caches the result. + * + * @param {string} value value to validate + * @param {function(inputToValidate,validationDone)} validate function to call to validate the state + * of the input. + * @param {function(data)=} [update=noop] function to call when state of the + * validator changes + * + * @paramDescription + * The `validate` function (specified by you) is called as + * `validate(inputToValidate, validationDone)`: + * + * * `inputToValidate`: value of the input box. + * * `validationDone`: `function(error, data){...}` + * * `error`: error text to display if validation fails + * * `data`: data object to pass to update function + * + * The `update` function is optionally specified by you and is + * called by <angular/> on input change. Since the + * asynchronous validator caches the results, the update + * function can be called without a call to `validate` + * function. The function is called as `update(data)`: + * + * * `data`: data object as passed from validate function + * + * @css ng-input-indicator-wait + * + * @exampleDescription + * <pre> + * function myValidator (value, callback) { + * // simulate delayed response, validate on even input length + * setTimeout(function(){ + * callback(value.length % 2); + * }, 2000); + * }; + * </pre> + * + * @example + * <script> + * function myValidator(value, callback) { + * setTimeout(function(){ + * callback(value.length % 2); + * }, 2000); + * } + * </script> + * This input is validated asynchronously: + * <input name="text" ng:validate="asynchronous:$window.myValidator"> + * + */ /* * cache is attached to the element * cache: { |
