Reputation: 3801
I have a Account Model in which I am using Email Address as Username
public class RegisterModel
{
[Required]
[Display(Name = "Email Address")]
[DataType(DataType.EmailAddress)]
public string UserName { get; set; }
I have designed a custom class to verify email. But I recently noticed that the DataType.EmailAddress
. I tried to use this Datatype as shown in code above to check if I can validate the Username without my Custom Class but it fails. So my question is how is this DataType useful in .NET
. It seems to be doing nothing on my Registration Form.
Edit: It dosent even validate against a regex. For example Username: SS, ssssss, tttt, etc
all pass off as valid emails.
Edit: People I have a class to validate email in the code behind. I know hat are the complexities of validating Emails. I am not asking how to validate email. I am just asking about the uses of this datatype.
Upvotes: 9
Views: 16669
Reputation: 39807
So, you are asking what this data type does not why isn't it validating, correct? Per the MSDN, DataType attributes are used primarily for formatting and not validation (which you have learned). What this attribute should do, is when using the Html.DisplayFor()
helper, render the field as a clickable hyperlink.
@Html.DisplayFor(x=>x.UserName)
Renders
<a href="mailto:{0}">{0}</a>
Additionally, as pointed out by Zhaph in the comments below, using it in the Html.EditorFor()
will generate an HTML 5 email input, which looks something like this:
<input type="email".../>
From MSDN
The following example uses the DataTypeAttribute to customize the display of EmailAddress data field of the customer table in the AdventureWorksLT database. The e-mail addresses are shown as hyperlinks instead of the simple text that ASP.NET Dynamic Data would have inferred from the intrinsic data type.
Upvotes: 17
Reputation: 28618
DataType
alone will not trigger any server-side validation. But, since MVC 4 using DataType.EmailAddress
will make the HTML input use type="email"
, which in turn makes jQuery Validation perform Regex validation on the client.
.NET 4.5 introduced the [EmailAddress]
attribute, a subclass of DataTypeAttribute
. By using [EmailAddress]
you get both client and server side validation.
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 10246
Datatype.Emailaddress
derives from DataTypeAttribute
and adds client-side e-mail validation you also need to set <% Html.EnableClientValidation(); %>
in your corresponding view.
Alternatively you could use the DataAnnotations library by using EmailAddress
(This performs server side validation)
using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;
[Required]
[EmailAddress]
public String Email { get; set; }
This is the regex to validate Email address
[Required(ErrorMessage="Email is required")]
[RegularExpression(@"[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Za-z] {2,4}",
public String Email {get; set;}
You can also create custom email validation Attribute.
http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2010/01/15/asp-net-mvc-2-model-validation.aspx
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 3215
you can use the EmailAddress data annotation or the regex to solve this issue. Date type is used to tell the html helper to render the html for the view.
[EmailAddress]
[RegularExpression(@"\w+([-+.']\w+)*@\w+([-.]\w+)*\.\w+([-.]\w+)*", ErrorMessage = "Must be a valid Email Address")]
Upvotes: 4