It validates email for application use (registering a new account for example)
In your Gemfile :
gem 'valid_email'
In your code :
require 'valid_email'
class Person
include ActiveModel::Validations
attr_accessor :name, :email
validates :name, :presence => true, :length => { :maximum => 100 }
validates :email, :presence => true, :email => true
end
p = Person.new
p.name = "hallelujah"
p.email = "[email protected]"
p.valid? # => true
p.email = "john@doe"
p.valid? # => false
p.email = "John Does <[email protected]>"
p.valid? # => false
You can check if email domain has MX record:
validates :email, :email => {:mx => true, :message => I18n.t('validations.errors.models.user.invalid_email')}
Or
validates :email, :email => {:message => I18n.t('validations.errors.models.user.invalid_email')}, :mx => {:message => I18n.t('validations.errors.models.user.invalid_mx')}
You can check if the email domain looks valid. This uses a regular expression so no external services are required, which improves the performance of this check:
validates :email, :email => {:domain => true}
Alternatively, you can check if an email domain has a MX or A record by using :mx_with_fallback
instead of :mx
.
You can detect disposable accounts
validates :email, :email => {:ban_disposable_email => true, :message => I18n.t('validations.errors.models.user.invalid_email')}
If you don't want the MX validator stuff, just require the right file
require 'valid_email/email_validator'
Or in your Gemfile
gem 'valid_email', :require => 'valid_email/email_validator'
There is a chance that you want to use e-mail validator outside of model validation.
If that's the case, you can use the following methods:
ValidateEmail.valid?('[email protected]') # You can optionally pass a hash of options, same as validator
ValidateEmail.mx_valid?('[email protected]')
ValidateEmail.mx_valid_with_fallback?('[email protected]')
ValidateEmail.valid?('[email protected]')
Load it (and not the rails extensions) with
gem 'valid_email', require: 'valid_email/validate_email'
There is also a String and Nil class extension, if you require the gem in this way in Gemfile:
gem 'valid_email', require: ['valid_email/all_with_extensions']
You will be able to use the following methods:
nil.email? # => false
"[email protected]".email? # => May return true if it exists. It accepts a hash of options like ValidateEmail.valid?
- Ramihajamalala Hery hery[at]rails-royce.org
- Fire-Dragon-DoL francesco.belladonna[at]gmail.com
- dush dusanek[at]iquest.cz
- MIke Carter mike[at]mcarter.me
- Heng heng[at]reamaze.com
- Marco Perrando mperrando[at]soluzioninrete.it
- Jörg Thalheim joerg[at]higgsboson.tk
- Andrey Deryabin deriabin[at]gmail.com
- Nicholas Rutherford nick.rutherford[at]gmail.com
- Oleg Shur workshur[at]gmail.com
- Joel Chippindale joel[at]joelchippindale.com
- Sami Haahtinen sami[at]haahtinen.name
- Jean Boussier jean.boussier[at]gmail.com
-
Fork the project.
-
Make your feature addition or bug fix.
-
Add tests for it. This is important so I don’t break it in a future version unintentionally.
-
Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
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Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Copyright © 2011 Ramihajamalala Hery. See LICENSE for details