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Why can't I use resources as ErrorMessage with DataAnnotations?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-28 06:09 出处:网络
Why can\'t I do like this? [Required(ErrorMessage = \"*\")] [RegularExpression(\"^[a-zA-Z0-9_]*$\", ErrorMessage = Resources.RegistrationModel.UsernameError)]

Why can't I do like this?

[Required(ErrorMessage = "*")]
[RegularExpression("^[a-zA-Z0-9_]*$", ErrorMessage = Resources.RegistrationModel.UsernameError)]
public string Username { get; set; }

What is the error message telling me?

An attribute argument must be a constant expression , typeof expression or array creation expression of 开发者_如何学Can attribute parameter type.


When you are using the ErrorMessage property only constant strings or string literal can be assigned to it.

Use the ErrorMessageResourceType and ErrorMessageResourceName instead to specity your resources.

[RegularExpression(
    "^[a-zA-Z0-9_]*$", 
    ErrorMessageResourceType=typeof(Resources.RegistrationModel),
    ErrorMessageResourceName= "UsernameError"
)]

Note that the resources must be public (can be set in the resource editor).

Why can't I use resources as ErrorMessage with DataAnnotations?


Please see this link: http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/Getting-Started-WCF-RIA-1469cbe2/sourcecode?fileId=19242&pathId=774666288 (link broken, but left for attribution purposes)

public sealed partial class RegistrationData 
{ 
    [Key] 
    [Required(ErrorMessageResourceName = "ValidationErrorRequiredField", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(ErrorResources))] 
    [Display(Order = 0, Name = "UserNameLabel", ResourceType = typeof(RegistrationDataResources))] 
    [RegularExpression("^[a-zA-Z0-9_]*$", ErrorMessageResourceName = "ValidationErrorInvalidUserName", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(ErrorResources))] 
    [StringLength(255, MinimumLength = 4, ErrorMessageResourceName = "ValidationErrorBadUserNameLength", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(ErrorResources))] 
    public string UserName { get; set; } 


Try FluentModelMetaDataProvider.

Managed to use resources for error messages in strongly typed fashion.

Looks like this:

using System.Web.Mvc.Extensibility;

namespace UI.Model
{
    public class StoreInputMetadata : ModelMetadataConfigurationBase<StoreInput>
    {
        public StoreInputMetadata()
        {
            Configure(m => m.Id)
                .Hide();
            Configure(model => model.Name)
                .Required(Resources.Whatever.StoreIsRequired)
                .MaximumLength(64, Resources.Whatever.StoreNameLengthSomething);
        }
    }
}

What is the error message telling me?

An attribute argument must be a constant expression, typeof expression or array creation expression of an attribute parameter type.

It's already self explanatory. C# isn't dynamic language like Ruby where You can write classes that inherits random base class at runtime. :)

Here's what Skeet says about this.


It means that you cannot determine the value of the argument you are passing into the attribute at runtime, it must be at compile time so the value is embedded into the assembly.

The error message value needs to be a constant expression.

For information, attribute arguments can only be of types bool, byte, char, short, int, long, float, double, string, System.Type, and enums.


You should instead look at the ErrorMessageResourceName and ErrorMessageResourceType properties of this attribute. They do allow the error message to be pulled from a resource.


We can now use nameof for strongly typed error messages:

[RegularExpression("^[a-zA-Z0-9_]*$", 
  ErrorMessageResourceType=typeof(Resources.RegistrationModel),
  ErrorMessageResourceName=nameof(Resources.RegistrationModel.UsernameError)
)]
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