/*
 * Copyright 2002-2012 the original author or authors.
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */

package org.springframework.validation;

import org.springframework.beans.PropertyAccessException;

Strategy for processing DataBinder's missing field errors, and for translating a PropertyAccessException to a FieldError.

The error processor is pluggable so you can treat errors differently if you want to. A default implementation is provided for typical needs.

Note: As of Spring 2.0, this interface operates on a given BindingResult, to be compatible with any binding strategy (bean property, direct field access, etc). It can still receive a BindException as argument (since a BindException implements the BindingResult interface as well) but no longer operates on it directly.

Author:Alef Arendsen, Juergen Hoeller
See Also:
Since:1.2
/** * Strategy for processing {@code DataBinder}'s missing field errors, * and for translating a {@code PropertyAccessException} to a * {@code FieldError}. * * <p>The error processor is pluggable so you can treat errors differently * if you want to. A default implementation is provided for typical needs. * * <p>Note: As of Spring 2.0, this interface operates on a given BindingResult, * to be compatible with any binding strategy (bean property, direct field access, etc). * It can still receive a BindException as argument (since a BindException implements * the BindingResult interface as well) but no longer operates on it directly. * * @author Alef Arendsen * @author Juergen Hoeller * @since 1.2 * @see DataBinder#setBindingErrorProcessor * @see DefaultBindingErrorProcessor * @see BindingResult * @see BindException */
public interface BindingErrorProcessor {
Apply the missing field error to the given BindException.

Usually, a field error is created for a missing required field.

Params:
  • missingField – the field that was missing during binding
  • bindingResult – the errors object to add the error(s) to. You can add more than just one error or maybe even ignore it. The BindingResult object features convenience utils such as a resolveMessageCodes method to resolve an error code.
See Also:
/** * Apply the missing field error to the given BindException. * <p>Usually, a field error is created for a missing required field. * @param missingField the field that was missing during binding * @param bindingResult the errors object to add the error(s) to. * You can add more than just one error or maybe even ignore it. * The {@code BindingResult} object features convenience utils such as * a {@code resolveMessageCodes} method to resolve an error code. * @see BeanPropertyBindingResult#addError * @see BeanPropertyBindingResult#resolveMessageCodes */
void processMissingFieldError(String missingField, BindingResult bindingResult);
Translate the given PropertyAccessException to an appropriate error registered on the given Errors instance.

Note that two error types are available: FieldError and ObjectError. Usually, field errors are created, but in certain situations one might want to create a global ObjectError instead.

Params:
  • ex – the PropertyAccessException to translate
  • bindingResult – the errors object to add the error(s) to. You can add more than just one error or maybe even ignore it. The BindingResult object features convenience utils such as a resolveMessageCodes method to resolve an error code.
See Also:
/** * Translate the given {@code PropertyAccessException} to an appropriate * error registered on the given {@code Errors} instance. * <p>Note that two error types are available: {@code FieldError} and * {@code ObjectError}. Usually, field errors are created, but in certain * situations one might want to create a global {@code ObjectError} instead. * @param ex the {@code PropertyAccessException} to translate * @param bindingResult the errors object to add the error(s) to. * You can add more than just one error or maybe even ignore it. * The {@code BindingResult} object features convenience utils such as * a {@code resolveMessageCodes} method to resolve an error code. * @see Errors * @see FieldError * @see ObjectError * @see MessageCodesResolver * @see BeanPropertyBindingResult#addError * @see BeanPropertyBindingResult#resolveMessageCodes */
void processPropertyAccessException(PropertyAccessException ex, BindingResult bindingResult); }