Provided by: libhtml-formfu-perl_2.01000-2_all bug

NAME

       HTML::FormFu::Validator - Validator Base Class

SYNOPSIS

DESCRIPTION

METHODS

CORE VALIDATORS

BEST PRACTICES

       Try to avoid using callbacks if possible. Below is a more maintainable and reusable
       approach, which also keeps the code out of the controller.

       A normal application's directory would contain:

           lib/HTML/FormFu/Constraint/MyApp/
           lib/HTML/FormFu/Validator/MyApp/
           lib/HTML/FormFu/Plugin/MyApp/
           etc.

       Then, the form config file would just need:

           validator: 'MyApp::SomeValidator'

       And the class would be something like this:

           package HTML::FormFu::Validator::MyApp::SomeValidator;
           use Moose;
           extends 'HTML::FormFu::Validator';

           sub validate_value {
               my ( $self, $value, $params ) = @_;

               my $c = $self->form->stash->{context};

               return 1 if $c->model('DBIC')->is_valid($value);

               # assuming you want to return a custom error message
               # which perhaps includes something retrieved from the model
               # otherwise, just return 0
               die HTML::FormFu::Exception::Validator->new({
                   message => 'custom error message',
               });
           }

           1;

       HTML::FormFu::Validator::Callback

AUTHOR

       Carl Franks, "cfranks@cpan.org"

LICENSE

       This library is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.