2 releases
Uses old Rust 2015
0.1.1 | May 22, 2016 |
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0.1.0 | May 22, 2016 |
#302 in Email
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validations
Crate validations
provides an interface to check the validity of arbitrary types.
- validations on crates.io
- Documentation for the latest crates.io release
Overview
The Validate
trait provides the validate
method, which runs arbitrary validation logic and
returns a result indicating whether or not the value is valid. A return value of Ok(())
indicates a valid value. A return value of Err(Errors)
indicates an invalid value,
and includes details of why the value failed validation.
Errors
is a container that can hold both general and field-specific validation
errors for an invalid value. An individual validation error is represented by
Error
, which contains a human-readable error message, and an optional type of the
programmer's choice that includes additional contextual information about the error.
Types that implement Validate
should handle validation logic for each of their fields, as
necessary. If the type of a field implements Validate
itself, it's also possible to delegate
to the field to validate itself and assign any resulting errors back to the parent type's
errors.
Instead of implementing Validate
, another approach is to implement validation logic inside the
constructor function of a type T
, and return Result<T, Errors>
, preventing an invalid value
from being created in the first place. This may not always be possible, as the value may be
created through other means. For example, the value may be deserialized from a format like JSON
from an external source. In this case, the Validate
trait allows deserialization logic to be
decoupled from domain-level validation logic.
Examples
Validating a value:
let entry = AddressBookEntry {
cell_number: None,
email: Some(Email("rcohle@dps.la.gov")),
home_number: Some(PhoneNumber {
area_code: "555",
number: "555-5555",
}),
name: "Rust Cohle",
};
assert!(entry.validate().is_ok());
Validating a value with a non-field-specific error:
let entry = AddressBookEntry {
cell_number: None,
email: Some(Email("rcohle@dps.la.gov")),
home_number: None,
name: "Rust Cohle",
};
let errors = entry.validate().err().unwrap();
assert_eq!(
errors.base().unwrap()[0].message(),
"at least one phone number is required".to_string()
);
Validating a value with a field error:
let entry = AddressBookEntry {
cell_number: None,
email: Some(Email("rcohle@dps.la.gov")),
home_number: Some(PhoneNumber {
area_code: "555",
number: "555-5555",
}),
name: "",
};
let errors = entry.validate().err().unwrap();
assert_eq!(
errors.field("name").unwrap().base().unwrap()[0].message(),
"can't be blank".to_string()
);