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Form Validation with AngularJS and Spring MVC

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1. Overview

Validation is never quite as straightforward as we expect. And of course validating the values entered by a user into an application is very important for preserving the integrity of our data.

In the context of a web application, data input is usually done using HTML forms and requires both client-side and server-side validation.

In this tutorial, we’ll have a look at implementing client-side validation of form input using AngularJS and server-side validation using the Spring MVC framework.

2. Maven Dependencies

To start off, let’s add the following dependencies:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.springframework</groupId>
    <artifactId>spring-webmvc</artifactId>
    <version>4.3.7.RELEASE</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.hibernate</groupId>
    <artifactId>hibernate-validator</artifactId>
    <version>5.4.0.Final</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.core</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-databind</artifactId>
    <version>2.8.7</version>
</dependency>

The latest versions of spring-webmvc, hibernate-validator and jackson-databind can be downloaded from Maven Central.

3. Validation Using Spring MVC

An application should never rely solely on client-side validation, as this can be easily circumvented. To prevent incorrect or malicious values from being saved or causing improper execution of the application logic, it is important to validate input values on the server side as well.

Spring MVC offers support for server-side validation by using JSR 349 Bean Validation specification annotations. For this example, we will use the reference implementation of the specification, which is hibernate-validator.

3.1. The Data Model

Let’s create a User class that has properties annotated with appropriate validation annotations:

public class User {

    @NotNull
    @Email
    private String email;

    @NotNull
    @Size(min = 4, max = 15)
    private String password;

    @NotBlank
    private String name;

    @Min(18)
    @Digits(integer = 2, fraction = 0)
    private int age;

    // standard constructor, getters, setters
}

The annotations used above belong to the JSR 349 specification, with the exception of @Email and @NotBlank, which are specific to the hibernate-validator library.

3.2. Spring MVC Controller

Let’s create a controller class that defines a /user endpoint, which will be used to save a new User object to a List.

In order to enable validation of the User object received through request parameters, the declaration must be preceded by the @Valid annotation, and the validation errors will be held in a BindingResult instance.

To determine if the object contains invalid values, we can use the hasErrors() method of BindingResult.

If hasErrors() returns true, we can return a JSON array containing the error messages associated with the validations that did not pass. Otherwise, we will add the object to the list:

@PostMapping(value = "/user")
@ResponseBody
public ResponseEntity<Object> saveUser(@Valid User user, 
  BindingResult result, Model model) {
    if (result.hasErrors()) {
        List<String> errors = result.getAllErrors().stream()
          .map(DefaultMessageSourceResolvable::getDefaultMessage)
          .collect(Collectors.toList());
        return new ResponseEntity<>(errors, HttpStatus.OK);
    } else {
        if (users.stream().anyMatch(it -> user.getEmail().equals(it.getEmail()))) {
            return new ResponseEntity<>(
              Collections.singletonList("Email already exists!"), 
              HttpStatus.CONFLICT);
        } else {
            users.add(user);
            return new ResponseEntity<>(HttpStatus.CREATED);
        }
    }
}

As you can see, server-side validation adds the advantage of having the ability to perform additional checks that are not possible on the client side.

In our case, we can verify whether a user with the same email already exists – and return a status of 409 CONFLICT if that’s the case.

We also need to define our list of users and initialize it with a few values:

private List<User> users = Arrays.asList(
  new User("ana@yahoo.com", "pass", "Ana", 20),
  new User("bob@yahoo.com", "pass", "Bob", 30),
  new User("john@yahoo.com", "pass", "John", 40),
  new User("mary@yahoo.com", "pass", "Mary", 30));

Let’s also add a mapping for retrieving the list of users as a JSON object:

@GetMapping(value = "/users")
@ResponseBody
public List<User> getUsers() {
    return users;
}

The final item we need in our Spring MVC controller is a mapping to return the main page of our application:

@GetMapping("/userPage")
public String getUserProfilePage() {
    return "user";
}

We will take a look at the user.html page in more detail in the AngularJS section.

3.3. Spring MVC Configuration

Let’s add a basic MVC configuration to our application:

@Configuration
@EnableWebMvc
@ComponentScan(basePackages = "com.baeldung.springmvcforms")
class ApplicationConfiguration extends WebMvcConfigurerAdapter {

    @Override
    public void configureDefaultServletHandling(
      DefaultServletHandlerConfigurer configurer) {
        configurer.enable();
    }

    @Bean
    public InternalResourceViewResolver htmlViewResolver() {
        InternalResourceViewResolver bean = new InternalResourceViewResolver();
        bean.setPrefix("/WEB-INF/html/");
        bean.setSuffix(".html");
        return bean;
    }
}

3.4. Initializing the Application

Let’s create a class that implements WebApplicationInitializer interface to run our application:

public class WebInitializer implements WebApplicationInitializer {

    public void onStartup(ServletContext container) throws ServletException {

        AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext ctx
          = new AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext();
        ctx.register(ApplicationConfiguration.class);
        ctx.setServletContext(container);
        container.addListener(new ContextLoaderListener(ctx));

        ServletRegistration.Dynamic servlet 
          = container.addServlet("dispatcher", new DispatcherServlet(ctx));
        servlet.setLoadOnStartup(1);
        servlet.addMapping("/");
    }
}

3.5. Testing Spring MVC Validation Using cURL

Before we implement the AngularJS client section, we can test our API using cURL with the command:

curl -i -X POST -H "Accept:application/json" 
  "localhost:8080/spring-mvc-forms/user?email=aaa&password=12&age=12"

The response is an array containing the default error messages:

[
    "not a well-formed email address",
    "size must be between 4 and 15",
    "may not be empty",
    "must be greater than or equal to 18"
]

4. AngularJS validation

Client-side validation is useful in creating a better user experience, as it provides the user with information on how to successfully submit valid data and enables them to be able to continue to interact with the application.

The AngularJS library has great support for adding validation requirements on form fields, handling error messages, and styling valid and invalid forms.

First, let’s create an AngularJS module that injects the ngMessages module, which is used for validation messages:

var app = angular.module('app', ['ngMessages']);

Next, let’s create an AngularJS service and controller that will consume the API built in the previous section.

4.1. The AngularJS Service

Our service will have two methods that call the MVC controller methods — one to save a user, and one to retrieve the list of users:

app.service('UserService',['$http', function ($http) {
	
    this.saveUser = function saveUser(user){
        return $http({
          method: 'POST',
          url: 'user',
          params: {email:user.email, password:user.password, 
            name:user.name, age:user.age},
          headers: 'Accept:application/json'
        });
    }
	
    this.getUsers = function getUsers(){
        return $http({
          method: 'GET',
          url: 'users',
          headers:'Accept:application/json'
        }).then( function(response){
        	return response.data;
        } );
    }

}]);

4.2. The AngularJS Controller

The UserCtrl controller injects the UserService, calls the service methods, and handles the response and error messages:

app.controller('UserCtrl', ['$scope','UserService', function ($scope,UserService) {
	
	$scope.submitted = false;
	
	$scope.getUsers = function() {
		   UserService.getUsers().then(function(data) {
		       $scope.users = data;
	       });
	   }
    
    $scope.saveUser = function() {
    	$scope.submitted = true;
    	  if ($scope.userForm.$valid) {
            UserService.saveUser($scope.user)
              .then (function success(response) {
                  $scope.message = 'User added!';
                  $scope.errorMessage = '';
                  $scope.getUsers();
                  $scope.user = null;
                  $scope.submitted = false;
              },
              function error(response) {
                  if (response.status == 409) {
                    $scope.errorMessage = response.data.message;
            	  }
            	  else {
                    $scope.errorMessage = 'Error adding user!';
            	  }
                  $scope.message = '';
            });
    	  }
    }
   
   $scope.getUsers();
}]);

We can see in the example above that the service method is called only if the $valid property of userForm is true. Still, in this case, there is the additional check for duplicate emails, which can only be done on the server and is handled separately in the error() function.

Also notice that there is a submitted variable defined which will tell us if the form has been submitted or not.

Initially this variable will be false, and on invocation of the saveUser() method it becomes true. If we don’t want validation messages to show before the user submits the form, we can use the submitted variable to prevent this.

4.3. Form Using AngularJS Validation

In order to make use of the AngularJS library and our AngularJS module, we will need to add the scripts to our user.html page:

<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.5.6/angular.min.js">
</script>
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.4.0/angular-messages.js">
</script>
<script src="js/app.js"></script>

Then we can use our module and controller by setting the ng-app and ng-controller properties:

<body ng-app="app" ng-controller="UserCtrl">

Let’s create our HTML form:

<form name="userForm" method="POST" novalidate 
  ng-class="{'form-error':submitted}" ng-submit="saveUser()" >
...
</form>

Note that we have to set the novalidate attribute on the form in order to prevent default HTML5 validation and replace it with our own.

The ng-class attribute adds the form-error CSS class dynamically to the form if the submitted variable has a value of true.

The ng-submit attribute defines the AngularJS controller function that will be called when the form in submitted. Using ng-submit instead of ng-click has the advantage that it also responds to submitting the form using the ENTER key.

Now let’s add the four input fields for the User attributes:

<label class="form-label">Email:</label>
<input type="email" name="email" required ng-model="user.email" class="form-input"/>

<label class="form-label">Password:</label>
<input type="password" name="password" required ng-model="user.password" 
  ng-minlength="4" ng-maxlength="15" class="form-input"/>

<label class="form-label">Name:</label>
<input type="text" name="name" ng-model="user.name" ng-trim="true" 
  required class="form-input" />

<label class="form-label">Age:</label>
<input type="number" name="age" ng-model="user.age" ng-min="18"
  class="form-input" required/>

Each input field has a binding to a property of the user variable through the ng-model attribute.

For setting validation rules, we use the HTML5 required attribute and several AngularJS-specific attributes: ng-minglength, ng-maxlength, ng-min, and ng-trim.

For the email field, we also use the type attribute with a value of email for client-side email validation.

In order to add error messages corresponding to each field, AngularJS offers the ng-messages directive, which loops through an input’s $errors object and displays messages based on each validation rule.

Let’s add the directive for the email field right after the input definition:

<div ng-messages="userForm.email.$error" 
  ng-show="submitted && userForm.email.$invalid" class="error-messages">
    <p ng-message="email">Invalid email!</p>
    <p ng-message="required">Email is required!</p>
</div>

Similar error messages can be added for the other input fields.

We can control when the directive is displayed for the email field using the ng-show property with a boolean expression. In our example, we display the directive when the field has an invalid value, meaning the $invalid property is true, and the submitted variable is also true.

Only one error message will be displayed at a time for a field.

We can also add a check mark sign (represented by HEX code character ✓) after the input field in case the field is valid, depending on the $valid property:

<div class="check" ng-show="userForm.email.$valid">✓</div>

AngularJS validation also offers support for styling using CSS classes such as ng-valid and ng-invalid or more specific ones like ng-invalid-required and ng-invalid-minlength.

Let’s add the CSS property border-color:red for invalid inputs inside the form’s form-error class:

.form-error input.ng-invalid {
    border-color:red;
}

We can also show the error messages in red using a CSS class:

.error-messages {
    color:red;
}

After putting everything together, let’s see an example of how our client-side form validation will look when filled out with a mix of valid and invalid values:

AngularJS form validation example

5. Conclusion

In this tutorial, we’ve shown how we can combine client-side and server-side validation using AngularJS and Spring MVC.

As always, the full source code for the examples can be found over on GitHub.

To view the application, access the /userPage URL after running it.


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