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1 Form Validation. Validation  Validation of form data can be cumbersome using the basic techniques  StringTokenizer  If-else statements  Most of.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Form Validation. Validation  Validation of form data can be cumbersome using the basic techniques  StringTokenizer  If-else statements  Most of."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Form Validation

2 Validation  Validation of form data can be cumbersome using the basic techniques  StringTokenizer  If-else statements  Most of the time you want to validate against a pattern rather than a specific value  E.g. all digits or all letters or letters with one space in between  What pattern would define any web URL? Any email address?

3 Regular Expressions  One technique is to define your pattern using what is called a Regular Expression (RegEx) and process it using a RegEx engine  For example, the regex (\d+) means one or more digits  Java SE and Android have built-in RegEx functionality  java.util.regex

4 4 A Quick Introduction to Regular Expressions

5 Regular Expressions  Regular expressions (regex's) are sets of symbols and syntactic elements used to match patterns of text.

6 Basic Syntax CharUsageExample.Matches any single character.at = cat, bat, rat, 1at… *Matches zero or more occurrences of the single preceding character.*at = everything that ends with at 0*123 = 123, 0123, 00123… […] [^…] Matches any single character of the ones contained Matches any single character except for the ones contained [cbr]at = cat, bat, rat. [^bc]at = rat, sat…, but not bat, cat. ]*> = ^Beginning of line^a = line starts with a $End of line^$ = blank line (starts with the end of line) \Escapes following special character:. \ / & [ ] * + -> \. \\ \/ \& \[ \] \* \+ [cbr]at\. = matches cat., bat. and rat. only

7 7 Matches  Input string consumed from left to right  Match ranges: inclusive of the beginning index and exclusive of the end index  Example: Current REGEX is: foo Current INPUT is: foofoofoo I found the text "foo" starting at index 0 and ending at index 3. I found the text "foo" starting at index 3 and ending at index 6. I found the text "foo" starting at index 6 and ending at index 9.

8 Character Classes [abc]a, b, or c (simple class) [^abc]Any character except a, b, or c (negation) [a-zA-Z]a through z, or A through Z, inclusive (range) [a-d[m-p]]a through d, or m through p: [a-dm-p] (union) [a-z&&[def]]d, e, or f (intersection) [a-z&&[^bc]]a through z, except for b and c: [ad-z] (subtraction) [a-z&&[^m-p]]a through z, and not m through p: [a-lq-z] (subtraction)

9 Predefined Character Classes.Any character (may or may not match line terminators) \dA digit: [0-9] \DA non-digit: [^0-9] \sA whitespace character: [ \t\n\x0B\f\r] \SA non-whitespace character: [^\s] \wA word character: [a-zA-Z_0- 9] \WA non-word character: [^\w]

10 10 Quantifier Types  There are three types of regex matching styles:  Greedy  Reluctant  Possessive

11 11 Greedy  Example: Current REGEX is:.*foo Current INPUT is: xfooxxxxxxfoo I found the text "xfooxxxxxxfoo" starting at index 0 and ending at index 13. Greedy: first, the quantified portion of the expression eats the whole input string and tries for a match. If it fails, the matcher backs off the input string by one character and tries again, until a match is found. Greedy is the default style

12 12 Reluctant  Example: Current REGEX is:.*?foo Current INPUT is: xfooxxxxxxfoo I found the text "xfoo" starting at index 0 and ending at index 4. I found the text "xxxxxxfoo" starting at index 4 and ending at index 13. Reluctant: starts to match at the beginning of the input string. Then, iteratively eats another character until the whole input string is eaten. Note the ? On the expression, this indicates the previous portion should he handled reluctantly

13 13 Possessive  Example Current REGEX is:.*+foo Current INPUT is: xfooxxxxxxfoo No match found. Possessive: try to match only once on the whole input stream. NOTE the + sign

14 Examples GreedyReluctantPosse- ssive Meaning X?X??X?+ X, once or not at all X*X*?X*+ X, zero or more times X+X+?X++ X, one or more times X{n} X{n}?X{n}+ X, exactly n times X{n,}X{n,}?X{n,}+ X, at least n times X{n,m}X{n,m}?X{n,m} + X, at least n but not more than m times

15 Groups  With parentheses, we can create groups to apply quantifiers to several characters: “(abc)+”  Also useful for parsing results (see last slide)  Groups are numbered by counting their opening parentheses from left to right  Example: groups in “((A)(B(C)))” 1. ((A)(B(C))) 2. (A) 3. (B(C)) 4. (C)

16 Boundary matchers ^The beginning of a line $ The end of a line \b A word boundary \B A non-word boundary \A The beginning of the input \G The end of the previous match \Z The end of the input but for the final terminator, if any \z The end of the input Current REGEX is: \bdog\b Current INPUT is: The doggie plays in the yard. No match found. Current REGEX is: \bdog\b Current INPUT is: The dog plays in the yard. Match found.

17 Using Regular Expressions in Java

18 String  The String class contains several regex based methods  split(String regex) – splits a String using the regEx as a delimiter  replaceAll(String regex, String replacement) – replaces all match patterns with replacement  matches(String regex) – returns if the string matches the regex  These methods are sufficient for most simple validation tasks

19 split() example  NOTE: notice we are splitting against a literal period.  Since the period is part of the regex language, it must be escaped -> \.  But since you need to escape the backslash in Java -> \\. String testString = "This.is.a.test"; String[] data = testString.split("\\."); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(data)); OUTPUT: [This, is, a, test]

20 replaceAll() example  NOTE: we need to reassign the output string of the method to the variable since String instances are immutable String testString = "This.is.a.test.test.test"; testString = testString.replaceAll("\\.test", ""); System.out.println(testString); OUTPUT: This.is.a

21 matches() example  Regex description:  Starts with “This”  Has one or more groups of one or more whitespaces followed by one or more word characters  Followed by a single whitespace  Followed by “test” String match = "This is a test"; System.out.println(match.matches("This(\\s+\\w+)+\\stest")); OUTPUT: true

22 22 Java RegEx API  Two important classes:  java.util.regex.Pattern -- a compiled representation of a regular expression  java.util.regex.Matcher -- an engine that performs match operations by interpreting a Pattern  Example Pattern p = Pattern.compile("a*b"); Matcher m = p.matcher("aaaaab"); boolean b = m.matches();

23 Pattern  Patterns are compiled regular expressions.  Pattern instances are useful if you need to do a lot of work with the same regular expression  more efficient to compile it once and reuse it.  e.g. for parsing tasks

24 Pattern  The Pattern class and its companion, Matcher, are also a lot more powerful than the small amount of functionality exposed by StringMatcher  Can be used to find repeating patterns within a string  A Pattern is created using the static Pattern.compile(String regEx) method

25 Matcher  Once a Pattern is compiled, a Matcher instance can be obtained using matcher(String inputString) method of Pattern  Some common Matcher methods:  matches() – used to determine if the inputString matches the pattern used to create this Matcher  find() – used to loop through all the pattern matches in the inputString  group(int index) – isolates the value held in a specific group of the match  1-indexed, group 0 represents the whole match

26 Example  Regex description:  Starts with zero or more “a” characters  Followed by “b” Pattern p = Pattern.compile("a*b"); Matcher m = p.matcher("aaaaab"); boolean b = m.matches(); OUTPUT: true

27 Example import java.util.regex.*; public class RegEx{ public static void main( String args[] ){ String amounts = "$1.57 $316.15 $19.30 $0.30 $0.00 $41.10 $5.1 $.5"; Pattern strMatch = Pattern.compile( "\\$(\\d+)\\.(\\d\\d)" ); Matcher m = strMatch.matcher( amounts ); while ( m.find() ){ System.out.println( "$" + ( Integer.parseInt( m.group(1) ) + 5 ) + "." + m.group(2) ); }  Regex description:  Starts with “$”  Followed by one or more digits  Followed by a period  Followed by two digits OUTPUT: $6.57 $321.15 $24.30 $5.30 $5.00 $46.10

28 28 Additional References  SUN regexps tutorial http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/regex/  Java.util.regex API for Android file:///C:/android-sdk-windows/docs/reference/java/util/regex/package- summary.html

29 UI Validation in Android  EditText widgets have a means of limiting what types of characters using the inputType XML attribute  However, this is not enough to handle specific cases such as  does the cellphone number match a Philippine number (+63xxxxxxx) or a Globe/SMART/Sun number

30 UI Validation in Android  Regex Validation can be done in several places  Check the current text as you are typing  Requires a KeyListener  Can be a bit tricky  At a predefined point (e.g. when moving to the next screen)  Prior to triggering the next activity or closing the current activity extract all the strings and check against the patterns

31 Things to think about  What are the expressions for the following?  Email address  Web URL  Cellphone/Phone number  License plate  Money values (with commas and decimal)  Strong passwords


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