public class Validator
extends java.lang.Object
 This class is not meant to be created and used, it is actually documentation of settings
 allowed in a DataSource descriptor (.ds.xml file), for use with Smart GWT Pro Edition and
 above.
 See com.smartgwt.client.docs.serverds for how to use this documentation.
 
 Validators are specified for DataSource fields via the DataSourceField.validators
 property.  Validators that need not be run on the server can also be specified for a specific
 FormItem or ListGridField. 
 Smart GWT supports a powerful library of
 ValidatorTypes which have identical behavior on
 both the client and the server.   
  Beyond this, custom validators can be defined on the
 client and custom validation logic added on the server.  Note that the regexp and
 mask validator types are very flexible and can be used to perform virtually any
 kind of formatting check that doesn't involve some large external dataset. 
 Custom
 validators can be reused on the client by adding them to the global validator list, via the
 addValidator()
 method.
ValidatorType| Modifier and Type | Field and Description | 
|---|---|
boolean | 
caseSensitive
Applies only to the "isUnique" validator and controls whether the search for existing records
 is case sensitive or not. 
 | 
java.lang.Boolean | 
clientOnly
Indicates this validator runs on the client only. 
 | 
java.lang.String[] | 
dependentFields
User-defined list of fields on which this validator depends. 
 | 
java.lang.String | 
errorMessage
Text to display if the value does not pass this validation check. 
 | 
java.lang.String | 
serverCondition
For validators of type "serverCustom" only: a scriptlet in any supported JSR223 scripting
  language which is run in order to see if validation passes. 
 | 
ServerObject | 
serverObject
For validators of type "serverCustom" only, a  
ServerObject declaration that allows
  the Smart GWT Server to find a Java class via a variety of possible approaches, and call a
  method on it to perform validation. | 
java.lang.Boolean | 
serverOnly
Indicates this validator runs on the server only. 
 | 
java.lang.Boolean | 
stopIfFalse
Normally, all validators defined for a field will be run even if one of the validators has
 already failed. 
 | 
java.lang.Boolean | 
stopOnError
Indicates that if this validator is not passed, the user should not be allowed to exit the
 field - focus will be forced back into the field until the error is corrected. 
 | 
ValidatorType | 
type
Type of the validator. 
 | 
java.lang.Boolean | 
validateOnChange
If true, validator will be validated when each item's "change" handler is fired as well as when
 the entire form is submitted or validated. 
 | 
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
Validator()  | 
public ValidatorType type
 This can be one of the built-in ValidatorType, the string "custom" to define a custom validator, or
 the string "serverCustom" to define a server-only custom validator.
 
Default value is null
public java.lang.Boolean serverOnly
Default value is null
public java.lang.String serverCondition
      <validator type="serverCustom">
          <serverCondition language="groovy"><![CDATA[
              value < dataSources.StockItem.fetchById(record.itemId).quantity
          ]]></serverCondition>
      </validator>
  
  The scriptlet should return a boolean true or false value - failing to return a value will
  be considered a false result (validator failed).  If your expression is syntactically
  invalid, an exception is thrown and the error message is displayed in the client.
  
 See ServerScript for general information on Server Scripting
 and JSR223, and
 VelocitySupport for general information on Velocity support,
 and also see below
  for special rules for Velocity.
  
  Available variables
  The following variables are available in a serverCondition:
  
MapDSField object)
      $dataSource.fetchById($record.primaryKeyField).otherFieldName
  
  Note that, while a DSRequest provides dsRequest.oldValues, these values cannot be relied
  upon for a security check since they could be faked.
  
  Server-side custom validators also have access to the standard set of context variables that
  come from the Servlet API.  However, be aware that if you write conditions that depend upon 
  these variables, you preclude your Validator from being used in the widest possible variety 
  of circumstances; for example, in a command-line process.  Rather, it will be tied to 
  operating in the context of, say, an HttpSession.  
  
Given the above caveat, the following context variables are also available:
HttpServletRequestHttpSessionMap
          of the associated HttpServletRequest; it is an alternate form of 
          $servletRequest.getParameterMap 
          of the associated HttpServletRequest; it is an alternate form of 
          $servletRequest.getAttributeMap 
          of the associated HttpSession; it is an alternate form of 
          $session.getAttributeSpecial considerations for Velocity
To return a true or false value in Velocity, you script can either be just an expression that returns a boolean value, or the result of evaluating the Velocity template can result in output of "true" or "false". All of the following are valid forms:
    $value < 100(assuming that "someField" contains a boolean
 value)
    $util.contains($value, "some string")
   $record.someField
    $value > $record.otherField
For additional troubleshooting information when Velocity expressions aren't working as expected, set the log category org.apache.Velocity to DEBUG in log4j.isc.config.xml.
Because it's tricky to call arbitrary Java methods in Velocity, the following special objects are passed to Velocity for convenience:
$dataSources.supplyItem refers to the supplyItem DataSource
      object).com.isomorphic.util.DataTools object, giving you access to
                all of that class's useful helper functionsDefault value is null
public java.lang.Boolean stopOnError
 This
 property defaults to FormItem.stopOnError if unset. 
 Enabling this property also implies FormItem.validateOnExit is
 automatically enabled. If this is a server-based validator, setting this property also implies
 that FormItem.synchronousValidation is forced on.
 
Default value is null
public java.lang.String[] dependentFields
applyWhen criteria.
 Default value is null
com.smartgwt.client.docs.serverds.Validator#applyWhenpublic ServerObject serverObject
ServerObject declaration that allows
  the Smart GWT Server to find a Java class via a variety of possible approaches, and call a
  method on it to perform validation.
  
  The target object must implement a method whose first 4 arguments are:
  
     Object value, Validator validator, String fieldName, Map record
  
  (com.isomorphic.datasource.Validator is a subclass of Map that 
  represents a validator's configuration, and also provides APIs for implementing templated
  error messages).
  You provide the name of the method to call by specifying 
  methodName
  as part of the serverObject declaration.  If you do not specify a methodName, Smart GWT 
  expects to find a compliant method called "condition".
  
  Additional arguments may be declared and are automatically supplied based on the declared
 argument type, via DMI.  Available objects
 include:
  
Note that "record" will contain only other values submitted at the same time, not the complete DataSource record. For most types of cross-field validation, you should fetch the current saved record. For example:
      final Map existingRecord = dataSource.fetchById(record);
   
 Default value is null
public java.lang.Boolean validateOnChange
Note that this property can also be set at the form/grid or field level; If true at any level and not explicitly false on the validator, the validator will be fired on change - displaying errors and rejecting the change on validation failure.
Default value is null
public boolean caseSensitive
Default value is false
public java.lang.Boolean clientOnly
Normally, if the server is trying to run validators and finds a validator that it can't execute, for safety reasons validation is considered to have failed. Use this flag to explicitly mark a validator that only needs to run on the client.
Default value is false
public java.lang.String errorMessage
If unspecified, default error messages exist for all built-in validators, and a generic message will be used for a custom validator that is not passed.
Default value is null
public java.lang.Boolean stopIfFalse
stopIfFalse is set, validation will not proceed
 beyond this validator if the check fails. This is useful to prevent expensive validators from being run unnecessarily, or to allow custom validators that don't need to be robust about handling every conceivable type of value.
Default value is false