Does anyone know if it is possible to use your own regular expression for fields with the JQuery Validation plugin?I have previously used Live Validation (standalone) which allows you to do this kind of thing:var loginpass = new LiveValidation('loginpass');loginpass.add( Validate.Format, { pattern: /^[A-Za-zd]+$/i } );
I'm trying to validate data in a textbox for township (usually written as 12N or 23S for Township 12 North or Township 23 South). In Utah the townships range from 01N to 15N, and 01S to 44S. The expression "/[0-9][0-4][ns]/i" will allow 01n (or s) through 94n (or s). If I change it to "/[0-4][0-4][ns]/i" to limit it to 44n (or s), I then am not allowing for 05, 06, 07, 08, and 09. I hope the above is not too confusing. I'm just starting to work with regular expressions.
I'm using this to try to validate a small subset of the valid e-mail addresses allowed by the relevant RFC (alphanumerics, underscores, and dashes). I've tested it and it seems to work....
Does anyone know of a regualr expression to validate US and Canadian Postal Codes? I want to be able to accept ##### or #####-#### or Canadian A#A #A# that is alpha,number,alpha number,alpha,number.
I am new to regular expressions. The US 5 digit part is easy, but I get stuck after that.
I need a regular expression to validate a string which consists of numbers, seprated by a period. For example: 123.456.7890.123 or
543245634.564362454.543543523.43532543
Basically, its a set of any amount of numbers, seperated by a period, ocurring any number of times. Now this is my first time dealving into regular expressions, and after reading some tutorials i came up with this:
I wish to ammend it so that the time or h:m:s part is validated only if supplied (i.e. I wish to make the time part optional). At present if a time is not supplied the validation fails. I gather that the following part of the above expression
(20|21|22|23|[0-1]?d):[0-5]?d:[0-5]?d$
validates the time, however I don't know the syntax to make it optional.
i am using the following regular expression for the validation of Email address /^.+@([?)[a-zA-Z0-9-.]+.([a-zA-Z]{2,3}|[0-9]{1,3})(]?)$/; but the problem is that if user enters any white space character while entering email address then email is considered as valid how ever we know that an email address can not contain any white space character i have tried a lot but could not get a correct regular expression
I am stuck on this seemingly simple validation loop.I want to iterate through a list of comma separated emails entered in a textarea input and check their validity before submitting the form.For some reason even when I enter all valid emails every other email doesn't pass the validation test!
var okEmailArr = badEmailArr = new Array(); var emails = $('#emailList').val(); // Get email list from text are input[code]....
is there a way to select elements that match a regular expression? I have a set of divs with id = "wrap_n" where n is a progressive and I need to select them and for each 1 I have to add a function that togggle the "elem_n" div.
I Use the regular expression to find the html tags present in the input box, It works properly in IE & FF but in chrome it works fine when use first time for an input box but not again, below my code...
It has to be flexible in that the extension can be either 4, 5, or 6 chars (.php, .html, .shtml for example) and needs to cater for and whether querystring parameters exist too.
--------------------------- Windows Internet Explorer --------------------------- <EMBED src=http://www.youtube.com/v/JTmM3jut05Q&hl=en&fs=1& width=500 height=200 type=application/x-shockwave-flash allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></EMBED>
how can i get "src" value in above code using regular expression?
does anyone know how I can build a regular expression e.g. for the string.search() function on runtime, depending on the content of variables? Should be something like this:
var strkey = "something"; var str = "Somethin like this";
I need a regular expression that will validate a double quote comma delimited list where the odd entries are numeric and the even are alphabetical. Each pair must also be on a separate line. For example:
"1","Peter" "2","Paul" "3","Mary"
I've used the following expression to validate comma delimited lists, but without the double quotes, numeric/alpha pairing and line return restriction.