Jon
Jon

Reputation: 40032

Using DataAnnotations on Windows Forms project

I recently used ASP.Net MVC with DataAnnotations and was thinking of using the same approach for a Forms project but I'm not sure how to go about it.

I have set my attributes but they do not seem to get checked when I click Save.

UPDATE: I have used Steve Sanderson's approach which will check for attributes on my class and return a collection of errors like so:

        try
        {
            Business b = new Business();
            b.Name = "feds";
            b.Description = "DFdsS";
            b.CategoryID = 1;
            b.CountryID = 2;
            b.EMail = "SSDF";
            var errors = DataAnnotationsValidationRunner.GetErrors(b);
            if (errors.Any())
                throw new RulesException(errors);

            b.Save();
        }
        catch(Exception ex)
        {

        }

What do you think of this approach?

Upvotes: 18

Views: 19061

Answers (4)

RB Davidson
RB Davidson

Reputation: 628

I found a decent example of using DataAnnotations with WinForms using the Validator class, including tying into the IDataErrorInfo interface so ErrorProvider can display the results.

Here is the link. DataAnnotations Validation Attributes in Windows Forms

Upvotes: 1

Bedouin
Bedouin

Reputation: 490

If you use newest versions of Entity Framework you can use this cmd to get a list of your errors if existing:

YourDbContext.Entity(YourEntity).GetValidationResult();

Upvotes: -1

in3xu4
in3xu4

Reputation: 978

Here's a simple example. suppose you have an object like the following

using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;

public class Contact
{
    [Required(AllowEmptyStrings = false, ErrorMessage = "First name is required")]
    [StringLength(20, MinimumLength = 5, ErrorMessage = "First name must be between 5 and 20 characters")]
    public string FirstName { get; set; }

    public string LastName { get; set; }

    [DataType(DataType.DateTime)]
    public DateTime Birthday { get; set; }
}

And suppose we have a method that creates an instance of this class and tries to validate its properties, as listed below

    private void DoSomething()
    {
        Contact contact = new Contact { FirstName = "Armin", LastName = "Zia", Birthday = new DateTime(1988, 04, 20) };

        ValidationContext context = new ValidationContext(contact, null, null);
        IList<ValidationResult> errors = new List<ValidationResult>();

        if (!Validator.TryValidateObject(contact, context, errors,true))
        {
            foreach (ValidationResult result in errors)
                MessageBox.Show(result.ErrorMessage);
        }
        else
            MessageBox.Show("Validated");
    }

The DataAnnotations namespace is not tied to the MVC framework so you can use it in different types of applications. the code snippet above returns true, try to update the property values to get validation errors.

And make sure to checkout the reference on MSDN: DataAnnotations Namespace

Upvotes: 27

Paul
Paul

Reputation: 36329

Steve's example is a bit dated (though still good). The DataAnnotationsValidationRunner that he has can be replaced by the System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations.Validator class now, it has static methods for validating properties and objects which have been decorated with DataAnnotations attributes.

Upvotes: 5

Related Questions