Question

I am building an angular app for which I have some forms set up. I have some fields that are required to be filled before submission. Therefore I have added 'required' on them:

<input type="text" class="form-control" placeholder="Test" ng-model="data.test" required>

However when I launch my app, the fields are displayed as 'invalid' and the classes 'ng-invalid' and 'ng-invalid-required' even before the submit button has been click or before the user has typed anything in the fields.

How can I make sure that thoses 2 classes are not added immediately but either once the user has submitted the form or when he has typed something wrong in the corresponding field?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Since the inputs are empty and therefore invalid when instantiated, Angular correctly adds the ng-invalid class.

A CSS rule you might try:

input.ng-dirty.ng-invalid {
  color: red
}

Which basically states when the field has had something entered into it at some point since the page loaded and wasn't reset to pristine by $scope.formName.setPristine(true) and something wasn't yet entered and it's invalid then the text turns red.

Other useful classes for Angular forms (see input for future reference )

ng-valid-maxlength - when ng-maxlength passes
ng-valid-minlength - when ng-minlength passes
ng-valid-pattern - when ng-pattern passes
ng-dirty - when the form has had something entered since the form loaded
ng-pristine - when the form input has had nothing inserted since loaded (or it was reset via setPristine(true) on the form)
ng-invalid - when any validation fails (required, minlength, custom ones, etc)

Likewise there is also ng-invalid-<name> for all these patterns and any custom ones created.

OTHER TIPS

Thanks to this post, I use this style to remove the red border that appears automatically with bootstrap when a required field is displayed, but user didn't have a chance to input anything already:

input.ng-pristine.ng-invalid {
    -webkit-box-shadow: none;
    -ms-box-shadow: none;
    box-shadow:none;
}

Since the fields are empty they are not valid, so the ng-invalid and ng-invalid-required classes are added properly.

You can use the class ng-pristine to check out whether the fields have already been used or not.

Try to add the class for validation dynamically, when the form has been submitted or the field is invalid. Use the form name and add the 'name' attribute to the input. Example with Bootstrap:

<div class="form-group" ng-class="{'has-error': myForm.$submitted && (myForm.username.$invalid && !myForm.username.$pristine)}">
    <label class="col-sm-2 control-label" for="username">Username*</label>
    <div class="col-sm-10 col-md-9">
        <input ng-model="data.username" id="username" name="username" type="text" class="form-control input-md" required>
    </div>
</div>

It is also important, that your form has the ng-submit="" attribute:

<form name="myForm" ng-submit="checkSubmit()" novalidate>
 <!-- input fields here -->
 ....

  <button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>

You can also add an optional function for validation to the form:

//within your controller (some extras...)

$scope.checkSubmit = function () {

   if ($scope.myForm.$valid) {
        alert('All good...'); //next step!

   }
   else {
        alert('Not all fields valid! Do something...');
    }

 }

Now, when you load your app the class 'has-error' will only be added when the form is submitted or the field has been touched. Instead of:
!myForm.username.$pristine

You could also use:
myForm.username.$dirty

the accepted answer is correct.. for mobile you can also use this (ng-touched rather ng-dirty)

input.ng-invalid.ng-touched{
  border-bottom: 1px solid #e74c3c !important; 
}
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