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16.

UniqueEntity & Validation Directly on Form Fields

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The registration form works, but we have a few problems. First, geez, it looks terrible. We'll fix that a bit later. More importantly, it completely lacks validation... except, of course, for the HTML5 validation that we get for free. But, we can't rely on that.

No problem: let's add some validation constraints to email and plainPassword! We know how to do this: add annotations to the class that is bound to this form: the User class. Find the email field and, above, add @Assert\NotBlank(). Make sure to hit tab to auto-complete this so that PhpStorm adds the use statement that we need on top. Also add @Assert\Email().

250 lines | src/Entity/User.php
// ... lines 1 - 14
class User implements UserInterface
{
// ... lines 17 - 23
/**
// ... lines 25 - 26
* @Assert\NotBlank()
* @Assert\Email()
*/
private $email;
// ... lines 31 - 248
}

Nice! Move back to your browser and inspect the form. Add the novalidate attribute so we can skip HTML5 validation. Then, enter "foo" and, submit! Nice! Both of these validation annotations have a message option - let's customize the NotBlank message: "Please enter an email".

250 lines | src/Entity/User.php
// ... lines 1 - 23
/**
// ... lines 25 - 26
* @Assert\NotBlank(message="Please enter an email")
// ... line 28
*/
private $email;
// ... lines 31 - 250

Cool! email field validation, done!

Unique User Validation

But... hmm... there's one other validation rule that we need that's related to email: when someone registers, we need to make sure their email address isn't already registered. Try geordi@theenterprise.org again. I'll add the novalidate attribute so I can leave the password empty. Register! It explodes!

Integrity constraint violation: duplicate entry "geordi@theenterprise.org

Ok, fortunately, we do have the email column marked as unique in the database. But, we probably don't want a 500 error when this happens.

This is the first time that we need to add validation that's not just as simple as "look at this field and make sure it's not blank", "or a valid email string". This time we need to look into the database to see if the value is valid.

When you have more complex validation situations, you have two options. First, try the Callback constraint! This allows you do whatever you need. Well, mostly. Because the callback lives inside your entity, you don't have access to any services. So, you couldn't make a query, for example. If Callback doesn't work, the solution that always works is to create your very own custom validation constraint. That's something we'll do later.

Fortunately, we don't need to do that here, because validating for uniqueness is so common that Symfony has a built-in constraint to handle it. But, instead of adding this annotation above your property, it lives above your class. Add @UniqueEntity. Oh, and notice! This added a different use statement because this class happens to live in a different namespace than the others.

This annotation needs at least one option: the fields that, when combined, need to be unique. For us, it's just email. You'll probably want to control the message too. How about: I think you've already registered.

255 lines | src/Entity/User.php
// ... lines 1 - 7
use Symfony\Bridge\Doctrine\Validator\Constraints\UniqueEntity;
// ... lines 9 - 12
/**
// ... line 14
* @UniqueEntity(
* fields={"email"},
* message="I think you're already registered!"
* )
*/
class User implements UserInterface
// ... lines 21 - 255

Oh, and just a reminder: if you have the PHP annotations plugin installed, you can hold command or control and click the annotation to open its class and see all its options.

Let's try it! Move over and refresh! Got it! That's a much nicer error.

Adding Validation Directly to Form Fields

There is one last piece of validation that's missing: the plainPassword field. At the very least, it needs to be required. But, hmm. In the form, this field is set to 'mapped' => false. There is no plainPassword property inside User that we can add annotations to!

No problem. Yes, we usually add validation rules via annotations on a class. But, if you have a field that's not mapped, you can add its validation rules directly to the form field via a constraints array option. What do you put inside? Remember how each annotation is represented by a concrete class? That's the key! Instantiate those as objects here: new NotBlank(). To pass options, use an array and set message to Choose a password!.

Heck, while we're here, let's also add new Length() so we can require a minimum length. Hold command or control and click to open that class and see the options. Ah, yea: min, max, minMessage, maxMessage. Ok: set min to, how about 5 and minMessage to Come on, you can think of a password longer than that!

43 lines | src/Form/UserRegistrationFormType.php
// ... lines 1 - 12
class UserRegistrationFormType extends AbstractType
{
public function buildForm(FormBuilderInterface $builder, array $options)
{
$builder
// ... lines 18 - 20
->add('plainPassword', PasswordType::class, [
'mapped' => false,
'constraints' => [
new NotBlank([
'message' => 'Choose a password!'
]),
new Length([
'min' => 5,
'minMessage' => 'Come on, you can think of a password longer than that!'
])
]
]);
;
}
// ... lines 35 - 41
}

Done! These constraint options will work exactly the same as the annotations. To prove it, go back and refresh! Got it! Now, validating an unmapped field is no problem. We rock!

Next: the registration form is missing one other field: the boring, but, unfortunately, all-important "Agree to terms" checkbox. The solution... is interesting.