Only fields present in the form are validated. Rules not matching any
element are ignored, so yes, you can just merge those.
Jörn
On Wed, Nov 25, 2009 at 12:24 AM, Dave Maharaj :: WidePixels.com <
d...@widepixels.com> wrote:
> I submit my form , check valid, valid then away it goes.
>
> I was wo
I submit my form , check valid, valid then away it goes.
I was wondering 1 thing. I have
$(this).validate(validate_awards);
var valid = $(this).valid();
if (valid) {
do my stuff
}
Now I have validate_awards which contains my rules for validation
var validate_awards = {
keyu
I have this script
$(document).ready( function() {
$('#username').blur( function () {
fieldName = $(this).attr('id');
fieldValue = $(this).val();
$.post('/users/ajax_validate', {
field: fieldName,
Hi Roryreiff - thank you so much.
Someone helped me out the other day. Here is another version:
multiemail: function(value, element) {
if (this.optional(element)) // return true on optional
element
return true;
var emails = val
ml2009,
I seem to have it working within the confines of validating multiple
email addresses within the plugin's reg exp. I made the validation
check run only if the email length is greater than one...this takes
care of the case when a user has a comma after the last email address
(i.e., this pre
ml2009,
I seem to have it working within the confines of validating multiple
email addresses within the plugin's reg exp. I made the validation
check run only if the email length is greater than one...this takes
care of the case when a user has a comma after the last email address
(i.e., this pre
Hi Stephan - thank you so much for your response.
I keep trying, but being unsuccessful. I tried valid = valid &&,
(valid=valid) &&, and (valid == valid) &&, but I get a syntax error
reference in Firebug. I even tried declaring
var valid = (value.length > 0); // make sure that value is not emp
Hi,
you have the same error as above.
Having a return statement in a for loop will evaluate the first element only.
If you want to validate all emails that's a logical AND conjunction of
all single email validations. So you have to have some and function in
your code as well.
Try something like:
Hello - wonder if you could help me. I tried another way to validate
multiple email addresses, but I still couldn't figure it out. on code
below, only the first email is validated. Any suggestions?
jQuery.validator.addMethod("multiemail", function(value, element,
param) {
if (this.optional(ele
I'm using the validate plugin, and am having a problem with simple one
element forms. I have a single select list and a submit button. If the
select list is empty, the validation prompts that it is required. When you
choose an option, and click Submit, it validates and removes the required
messa
trying to do the same type of validation, but it didn't work for me.
Could you please help?
multiemail: function(value, element) {
if (this.optional(element)) // return true on
optional element
return true;
var emai
trying to do the same type of validation, but it didn't work for me.
could you please help?
multiemail: function(value, element) {
if (this.optional(element)) // return true on optional element
return true;
var emails = value.split(',');
var valid = (value.length >
Hi,
Taking a second look on your code it's clear why only the first email
address is validated: you have a return statement in your for loop.
try something like:
email: function(value, element) {
if (this.optional(element)) // return true on optional element
(whatever this is for?)
return
Yeah, I actually have that fixed in the posted link, but thanks for
pointing that out. So, something else is at error now.
On Feb 17, 9:04 am, Stephan Veigl wrote:
> Hi
>
> is this just a copy & paste error, or a real syntax error? You have to
> quote the comma in your split command:
> var ema
Hi
is this just a copy & paste error, or a real syntax error? You have to
quote the comma in your split command:
var emails = value.split(",");
by(e)
Stephan
2009/2/17 roryreiff :
>
> So far, I have adapted this:
>
> email: function(value, element) {
>return this.opti
Rob,
By not working I mean that it now will not return an error message
when the first input is a well formed email. So, I could put in the
following (correctly formed email, incorrectly formed email + and
number of items) and it is validating that field, i.e. not producing
the error message. I w
On Feb 17, 10:53 am, roryreiff wrote:
> So far, I have adapted this:
>
[...]
> into this:
>
> email: function(value, element) {
> var emails = value.split(,);
> for(var emailAddress in emails)
> {
>
Allow me to show you what I have so far. It seems to validate base on
the first email, but none of the successive ones, in regards to the to
field: http://www.pomona.edu/asp/mailthis-redux.asp
On Feb 16, 4:53 pm, roryreiff wrote:
> So far, I have adapted this:
>
> email: function(value, elemen
So far, I have adapted this:
email: function(value, element) {
return this.optional(element) ||
/^((([a-z]|\d|[!#\$%&'\*\+\-\/=\?
\^_`{\|}~]|[\u00A0-\uD7FF\uF900-\uFDCF\uFDF0-\uFFEF])+(\.([a-z]|\d|[!#\
$%&'\*\+\-\/=\?\^_`{\|}~]|[\u00A0-\uD7FF\uF900-\uFDCF\uFDF0-\uFFEF])+)
I'm new to jQuery as well. In other languages, you would take the
string that holds all of the emails and do a 'split' on commas. This
should give you an array where each element is an individual email.
>From there, just validate each element.
How to do this in jQuery, someone more experienced tha
Hi there,
I am using the Validation plugin to validate a form that emails the
current pages URL to the recipients entered in to the "email to"
field. I want to validate that field for multiple emails addressed
separated by commas...and ideas on how to do this? I'm a bit new to
jQuery so I am a li
Maybe an example helps to explain, as I'm not sure I understand your question.
$("#myform").validate();
Request being sent to server for remote validaiton: GET
/unique-username?firstname=Pete
The response-text must be "true" or "false" (without the quotes) and
will be interpreted as JSON.
Hi All,
I just have few questions about the use of jQuery Validation remote
rule.
How remote rule treat data being passed through querystring? What is
the form of data being passed through querystring? Is it case
sensitive?
I hope you can give me answers to those questions.
Thanks,
Nimrod
That should work, though you should probably use something like
encodeURIComponent($('#AssignedTo').val())
to ensure legal characters.
You probably could have just tried it and found out faster than posting
here... ;)
j
On Mon, Jul 21, 2008 at 9:52 AM, Nimrod <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi
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