This constraint is used when the underlying data is a collection (i.e. an
array or an object that implements Traversable
and ArrayAccess
),
but you'd like to validate different keys of that collection in different
ways. For example, you might validate the email
key using the Email
constraint and the inventory
key of the collection with the Min
constraint.
This constraint can also make sure that certain collection keys are present and that extra keys are not present.
The Collection
constraint allows you to validate the different keys of
a collection individually. Take the following example:
namespace Acme\BlogBundle\Entity; class Author { protected $profileData = array( 'personal_email', 'short_bio', ); public function setProfileData($key, $value) { $this->profileData[$key] = $value; } }
To validate that the personal_email
element of the profileData
array
property is a valid email address and that the short_bio
element is not
blank but is no longer than 100 characters in length, you would do the following:
.. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: yaml properties: profileData: - Collection: fields: personal_email: Email short_bio: - NotBlank - MaxLength: limit: 100 message: Your short bio is too long! allowMissingfields: true .. code-block:: php-annotations // src/Acme/BlogBundle/Entity/Author.php use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints as Assert; class Author { /** * @Assert\Collection( * fields = { * "personal_email" = @Assert\Email, * "short_bio" = { * @Assert\NotBlank(), * @Assert\MaxLength( * limit = 100, * message = "Your bio is too long!" * ) * } * }, * allowMissingfields = true * ) */ protected $profileData = array( 'personal_email', 'short_bio', ); } .. code-block:: xml <!-- src/Acme/BlogBundle/Resources/config/validation.xml --> <class name="Acme\BlogBundle\Entity\Author"> <property name="profileData"> <constraint name="Collection"> <option name="fields"> <value key="personal_email"> <constraint name="Email" /> </value> <value key="short_bio"> <constraint name="NotBlank" /> <constraint name="MaxLength"> <option name="limit">100</option> <option name="message">Your bio is too long!</option> </constraint> </value> </option> <option name="allowMissingFields">true</option> </constraint> </property> </class> .. code-block:: php // src/Acme/BlogBundle/Entity/Author.php use Symfony\Component\Validator\Mapping\ClassMetadata; use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints\Collection; use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints\Email; use Symfony\Component\Validator\Constraints\MaxLength; class Author { private $options = array(); public static function loadValidatorMetadata(ClassMetadata $metadata) { $metadata->addPropertyConstraint('profileData', new Collection(array( 'fields' => array( 'personal_email' => new Email(), 'lastName' => array(new NotBlank(), new MaxLength(100)), ), 'allowMissingFields' => true, ))); } }
By default, this constraint validates more than simply whether or not the individual fields in the collection pass their assigned constraints. In fact, if any keys of a collection are missing or if there are any unrecognized keys in the collection, validation errors will be thrown.
If you would like to allow for keys to be absent from the collection or if
you would like "extra" keys to be allowed in the collection, you can modify
the allowMissingFields and allowExtraFields options respectively. In
the above example, the allowMissingFields
option was set to true, meaning
that if either of the personal_email
or short_bio
elements were missing
from the $personalData
property, no validation error would occur.
type: array
[:ref:`default option<validation-default-option>`]
This option is required, and is an associative array defining all of the keys in the collection and, for each key, exactly which validator(s) should be executed against that element of the collection.
type: Boolean
default: false
If this option is set to false
and the underlying collection contains
one or more elements that are not included in the fields option, a validation
error will be returned. If set to true
, extra fields are ok.
type: Boolean
default: The fields {{ fields }} were not expected
The message shown if allowExtraFields is false and an extra field is detected.
type: Boolean
default: false
If this option is set to false
and one or more fields from the fields
option are not present in the underlying collection, a validation error will
be returned. If set to true
, it's ok if some fields in the fields_
option are not present in the underlying collection.
type: Boolean
default: The fields {{ fields }} are missing
The message shown if allowMissingFields is false and one or more fields are missing from the underlying collection.