This package provides a framework for writing validations for Go applications. It does not, however, provide you with any actual validators, that part is up to you.
$ go get github.com/gobuffalo/validate
Using validate is pretty easy, just define some Validator
objects and away you go.
Here is a pretty simple example:
package main
import (
"log"
v "github.com/gobuffalo/validate"
)
type User struct {
Name string
Email string
}
func (u *User) IsValid(errors *v.Errors) {
if u.Name == "" {
errors.Add("name", "Name must not be blank!")
}
if u.Email == "" {
errors.Add("email", "Email must not be blank!")
}
}
func main() {
u := User{Name: "", Email: ""}
errors := v.Validate(&u)
log.Println(errors.Errors)
// map[name:[Name must not be blank!] email:[Email must not be blank!]]
}
In the previous example I wrote a single Validator
for the User
struct. To really get the benefit of using go-validator, as well as the Go language, I would recommend creating distinct validators for each thing you want to validate, that way they can be run concurrently.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"strings"
v "github.com/gobuffalo/validate"
)
type User struct {
Name string
Email string
}
type PresenceValidator struct {
Field string
Value string
}
func (v *PresenceValidator) IsValid(errors *v.Errors) {
if v.Value == "" {
errors.Add(strings.ToLower(v.Field), fmt.Sprintf("%s must not be blank!", v.Field))
}
}
func main() {
u := User{Name: "", Email: ""}
errors := v.Validate(&PresenceValidator{"Email", u.Email}, &PresenceValidator{"Name", u.Name})
log.Println(errors.Errors)
// map[name:[Name must not be blank!] email:[Email must not be blank!]]
}
That's really it. Pretty simple and straight-forward Just a nice clean framework for writing your own validators. Use in good health.