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问题:
Using Rails I\'m trying to get an error message like \"The song field can\'t be empty\" on save. Doing the following:
validates_presence_of :song_rep_xyz, :message => \"can\'t be empty\"
... only displays \"Song Rep XYW can\'t be empty\", which is not good because the title of the field is not user friendly. How can I change the title of the field itself ? I could change the actual name of the field in the database, but I have multiple \"song\" fields and I do need to have specific field names.
I don\'t want to hack around rails\' validation process and I feel there should be a way of fixing that.
回答1:
Now, the accepted way to set the humanized names and custom error messages is to use locales.
# config/locales/en.yml
en:
activerecord:
attributes:
user:
email: \"E-mail address\"
errors:
models:
user:
attributes:
email:
blank: \"is required\"
Now the humanized name and the presence validation message for the \"email\" attribute have been changed.
Validation messages can be set for a specific model+attribute, model, attribute, or globally.
回答2:
In your model:
validates_presence_of :address1, :message => \"Put some address please\"
In your view
<% m.errors.each do |attr,msg| %>
<%=msg%>
<% end %>
If you do instead
<%=attr %> <%=msg %>
you get this error message with the attribute name
address1 Put some address please
if you want to get the error message for one single attribute
<%= @model.errors[:address1] %>
回答3:
Try this.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
validate do |user|
user.errors.add_to_base(\"Country can\'t be blank\") if user.country_iso.blank?
end
end
I found this here.
Here is another way to do it.
What you do is define a human_attribute_name method on the model class. The method is passed the column name as a string and returns the string to use in validation messages.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
HUMANIZED_ATTRIBUTES = {
:email => \"E-mail address\"
}
def self.human_attribute_name(attr)
HUMANIZED_ATTRIBUTES[attr.to_sym] || super
end
end
The above code is from here
回答4:
Yes, there\'s a way to do this without the plugin!
But it is not as clean and elegant as using the mentioned plugin. Here it is.
Assuming it\'s Rails 3 (I don\'t know if it\'s different in previous versions),
keep this in your model:
validates_presence_of :song_rep_xyz, :message => \"can\'t be empty\"
and in the view, instead of leaving
@instance.errors.full_messages
as it would be when we use the scaffold generator, put:
@instance.errors.first[1]
And you will get just the message you specified in the model, without the attribute name.
Explanation:
#returns an hash of messages, one element foreach field error, in this particular case would be just one element in the hash:
@instance.errors # => {:song_rep_xyz=>\"can\'t be empty\"}
#this returns the first element of the hash as an array like [:key,\"value\"]
@instance.errors.first # => [:song_rep_xyz, \"can\'t be empty\"]
#by doing the following, you are telling ruby to take just the second element of that array, which is the message.
@instance.errors.first[1]
So far we are just displaying only one message, always for the first error. If you wanna display all errors you can loop in the hash and show the values.
Hope that helped.
回答5:
Rails3 Code with fully localized messages:
In the model user.rb define the validation
validates :email, :presence => true
In config/locales/en.yml
en:
activerecord:
models:
user: \"Customer\"
attributes:
user:
email: \"Email address\"
errors:
models:
user:
attributes:
email:
blank: \"cannot be empty\"
回答6:
In the custom validation method use:
errors.add(:base, \"Custom error message\")
as add_to_base has been deprecated.
errors.add_to_base(\"Custom error message\")
回答7:
I recommend installing the custom_error_message gem (or as a plugin) originally written by David Easley
It lets you do stuff like:
validates_presence_of :non_friendly_field_name, :message => \"^Friendly field name is blank\"
回答8:
Related to the accepted answer and another answer down the list:
I\'m confirming that nanamkim\'s fork of custom-err-msg works with Rails 5, and with the locale setup.
You just need to start the locale message with a caret and it shouldn\'t display the attribute name in the message.
A model defined as:
class Item < ApplicationRecord
validates :name, presence: true
end
with the following en.yml
:
en:
activerecord:
errors:
models:
item:
attributes:
name:
blank: \"^You can\'t create an item without a name.\"
item.errors.full_messages
will display:
You can\'t create an item without a name
instead of the usual Name You can\'t create an item without a name
回答9:
Here is another way:
If you use this template:
<% if @thing.errors.any? %>
<ul>
<% @thing.errors.full_messages.each do |message| %>
<li><%= message %></li>
<% end %>
</ul>
<% end %>
You can write you own custom message like this:
class Thing < ActiveRecord::Base
validate :custom_validation_method_with_message
def custom_validation_method_with_message
if some_model_attribute.blank?
errors.add(:_, \"My custom message\")
end
end
This way, because of the underscore, the full message becomes \" My custom message\", but the extra space in the beginning is unnoticeable. If you really don\'t want that extra space at the beginning just add the .lstrip
method.
<% if @thing.errors.any? %>
<ul>
<% @thing.errors.full_messages.each do |message| %>
<li><%= message.lstrip %></li>
<% end %>
</ul>
<% end %>
The String.lstrip method will get rid of the extra space created by \':_\' and will leave any other error messages unchanged.
Or even better, use the first word of your custom message as the key:
def custom_validation_method_with_message
if some_model_attribute.blank?
errors.add(:my, \"custom message\")
end
end
Now the full message will be \"My custom message\" with no extra space.
If you want the full message to start with a word capitalized like \"URL can\'t be blank\" it cannot be done. Instead try adding some other word as the key:
def custom_validation_method_with_message
if some_model_attribute.blank?
errors.add(:the, \"URL can\'t be blank\")
end
end
Now the full message will be \"The URL can\'t be blank\"
回答10:
Just do it the normal way:
validates_presence_of :email, :message => \"Email is required.\"
But display it like this instead
<% if @user.errors.any? %>
<% @user.errors.messages.each do |message| %>
<div class=\"message\"><%= message.last.last.html_safe %></div>
<% end %>
<% end %>
Returns
\"Email is required.\"
The localization method is definitely the \"proper\" way to do this, but if you\'re doing a little, non-global project and want to just get going fast - this is definitely easier than file hopping.
I like it for the ability to put the field name somewhere other than the beginning of the string:
validates_uniqueness_of :email, :message => \"There is already an account with that email.\"
回答11:
One solution might be to change the i18n default error format:
en:
errors:
format: \"%{message}\"
Default is format: %{attribute} %{message}
回答12:
If you want to list them all in a nice list but without using the cruddy non human friendly name, you can do this...
object.errors.each do |attr,message|
puts \"<li>\"+message+\"</li>\"
end
回答13:
In your view
object.errors.each do |attr,msg|
if msg.is_a? String
if attr == :base
content_tag :li, msg
elsif msg[0] == \"^\"
content_tag :li, msg[1..-1]
else
content_tag :li, \"#{object.class.human_attribute_name(attr)} #{msg}\"
end
end
end
When you want to override the error message without the attribute name, simply prepend the message with ^ like so:
validates :last_name,
uniqueness: {
scope: [:first_name, :course_id, :user_id],
case_sensitive: false,
message: \"^This student has already been registered.\"
}
回答14:
I tried following, worked for me :)
1 job.rb
class Job < ApplicationRecord
validates :description, presence: true
validates :title,
:presence => true,
:length => { :minimum => 5, :message => \"Must be at least 5 characters\"}
end
2 jobs_controller.rb
def create
@job = Job.create(job_params)
if @job.valid?
redirect_to jobs_path
else
render new_job_path
end
end
3 _form.html.erb
<%= form_for @job do |f| %>
<% if @job.errors.any? %>
<h2>Errors</h2>
<ul>
<% @job.errors.full_messages.each do |message|%>
<li><%= message %></li>
<% end %>
</ul>
<% end %>
<div>
<%= f.label :title %>
<%= f.text_field :title %>
</div>
<div>
<%= f.label :description %>
<%= f.text_area :description, size: \'60x6\' %>
</div>
<div>
<%= f.submit %>
</div>
<% end %>
回答15:
Here is my code that can be useful for you in case you still need it:
My model:
validates :director, acceptance: {message: \"^Please confirm that you are a director of the company.\"}, on: :create, if: :is_director?
Then I have created a helper to show messages:
module ErrorHelper
def error_messages!
return \"\" unless error_messages?
messages = resource.errors.full_messages.map { |msg|
if msg.present? && !msg.index(\"^\").nil?
content_tag(:p, msg.slice((msg.index(\"^\")+1)..-1))
else
content_tag(:p, msg)
end
}.join
html = <<-HTML
<div class=\"general-error alert show\">
#{messages}
</div>
HTML
html.html_safe
end
def error_messages?
!resource.errors.empty?
end
end
回答16:
If you are working with Rails-5 You can also go with the following:
validates :user_name, presence: true, uniqueness: {message: \"User name already exist.\"}
回答17:
A unique approach I haven\'t seen anyone mention!
The only way I was able to get all the customisation I wanted was to use an after_validation
callback to allow me to manipulate the error message.
Allow the validation message to be created as normal, you don\'t need to try and change it in the validation helper.
create an after_validation
callback that will replace that validation message in the back-end before it gets to the view.
In the after_validation
method you can do anything you want with the validation message, just like a normal string! You can even use dynamic values and insert them into the validation message.
#this could be any validation
validates_presence_of :song_rep_xyz, :message => \"whatever you want - who cares - we will replace you later\"
after_validation :replace_validation_message
def replace_validation_message
custom_value = #any value you would like
errors.messages[:name_of_the_attribute] = [\"^This is the replacement message where
you can now add your own dynamic values!!! #{custom_value}\"]
end
The after_validation method will have far greater scope than the built in rails validation helper, so you will be able to access the object you are validating like you are trying to do with object.file_name. Which does not work in the validation helper where you are trying to call it.
Note: we use the ^
to get rid of the attribute name at the beginning of the validation as @Rystraum pointed out referencing this gem