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diff --git a/user_guide/libraries/validation.html b/user_guide/libraries/validation.html index 6037a24e8..394be1901 100644 --- a/user_guide/libraries/validation.html +++ b/user_guide/libraries/validation.html @@ -1,736 +1,736 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
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-<head>
-
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
-<title>Form Validation : CodeIgniter User Guide</title>
-
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-<td><h1>CodeIgniter User Guide Version 1.7</h1></td>
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-<a href="http://codeigniter.com/">CodeIgniter Home</a> ›
-<a href="../index.html">User Guide Home</a> ›
-Form Validation
-</td>
-<td id="searchbox"><form method="get" action="http://www.google.com/search"><input type="hidden" name="as_sitesearch" id="as_sitesearch" value="codeigniter.com/user_guide/" />Search User Guide <input type="text" class="input" style="width:200px;" name="q" id="q" size="31" maxlength="255" value="" /> <input type="submit" class="submit" name="sa" value="Go" /></form></td>
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-<div id="content">
-
-<h1>Form Validation</h1>
-
-<p>Before explaining CodeIgniter's approach to data validation, let's describe the ideal scenario:</p>
-
-<ol>
-<li>A form is displayed.</li>
-<li>You fill it in and submit it.</li>
-<li>If you submitted something invalid, or perhaps missed a required item, the form is redisplayed containing your data along with an error message describing the problem.</li>
-<li>This process continues until you have submitted a valid form.</li>
-</ol>
-
-<p>On the receiving end, the script must:</p>
-
-<ol>
-<li>Check for required data.</li>
-<li>Verify that the data is of the correct type, and meets the correct criteria. (For example, if a username is submitted
-it must be validated to contain only permitted characters. It must be of a minimum length,
-and not exceed a maximum length. The username can't be someone else's existing username, or perhaps even a reserved word. Etc.)</li>
-<li>Sanitize the data for security.</li>
-<li>Pre-format the data if needed (Does the data need to be trimmed? HTML encoded? Etc.)</li>
-<li>Prep the data for insertion in the database.</li>
-</ol>
-
-
-<p>Although there is nothing complex about the above process, it usually requires a significant
-amount of code, and to display error messages, various control structures are usually placed within the form HTML.
-Form validation, while simple to create, is generally very messy and tedious to implement.</p>
-
-<dfn>CodeIgniter provides a comprehensive validation framework that truly minimizes the amount of code you'll write.
-It also removes all control structures from your form HTML, permitting it to be clean and free of code.</dfn>
-
-<h2>Overview</h2>
-
-<p>In order to implement CodeIgniter's form validation you'll need three things:</p>
-
-<ol>
-<li>A <a href="../general/views.html">View</a> file containing the form.</li>
-<li>A View file containing a "success" message to be displayed upon successful submission.</li>
-<li>A <a href="../general/controllers.html">controller</a> function to receive and process the submitted data.</li>
-</ol>
-
-<p>Let's create those three things, using a member sign-up form as the example.</p>
-
-<h2>The Form</h2>
-
-<p>Using a text editor, create a form called <dfn>myform.php</dfn>. In it, place this code and save it to your <samp>applications/views/</samp>
-folder:</p>
-
-
-<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="30"><html>
-<head>
-<title>My Form</title>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-<?php echo $this->validation->error_string; ?>
-
-<?php echo form_open('form'); ?>
-
-<h5>Username</h5>
-<input type="text" name="username" value="" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Password</h5>
-<input type="text" name="password" value="" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Password Confirm</h5>
-<input type="text" name="passconf" value="" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Email Address</h5>
-<input type="text" name="email" value="" size="50" />
-
-<div><input type="submit" value="Submit" /></div>
-
-</form>
-
-</body>
-</html>
-</textarea>
-
-
-<h2>The Success Page</h2>
-
-
-<p>Using a text editor, create a form called <dfn>formsuccess.php</dfn>. In it, place this code and save it to your <samp>applications/views/</samp>
-folder:</p>
-
-
-<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="14">
-<html>
-<head>
-<title>My Form</title>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-<h3>Your form was successfully submitted!</h3>
-
-<p><?php echo anchor('form', 'Try it again!'); ?></p>
-
-</body>
-</html>
-</textarea>
-
-
-<h2>The Controller</h2>
-
-<p>Using a text editor, create a controller called <dfn>form.php</dfn>. In it, place this code and save it to your <samp>applications/controllers/</samp>
-folder:</p>
-
-
-<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="21"><?php
-
-class Form extends Controller {
-
- function index()
- {
- $this->load->helper(array('form', 'url'));
-
- $this->load->library('validation');
-
- if ($this->validation->run() == FALSE)
- {
- $this->load->view('myform');
- }
- else
- {
- $this->load->view('formsuccess');
- }
- }
-}
-?></textarea>
-
-
-<h2>Try it!</h2>
-
-<p>To try your form, visit your site using a URL similar to this one:</p>
-
-<code>example.com/index.php/<var>form</var>/</code>
-
-<p><strong>If you submit the form you should simply see the form reload. That's because you haven't set up any validation
-rules yet, which we'll get to in a moment.</strong></p>
-
-
-<h2>Explanation</h2>
-
-<p>You'll notice several things about the above pages:</p>
-
-<p>The <dfn>form</dfn> (myform.php) is a standard web form with a couple exceptions:</p>
-
-<ol>
-<li>It uses a <dfn>form helper</dfn> to create the form opening.
-Technically, this isn't necessary. You could create the form using standard HTML. However, the benefit of using the helper
-is that it generates the action URL for you, based on the URL in your config file. This makes your application more portable
-and flexible in the event your URLs change.</li>
-
-<li>At the top of the form you'll notice the following variable:
-<code><?php echo $this->validation->error_string; ?></code>
-
-<p>This variable will display any error messages sent back by the validator. If there are no messages it returns nothing.</p>
-</li>
-</ol>
-
-<p>The <dfn>controller</dfn> (form.php) has one function: <dfn>index()</dfn>. This function initializes the validation class and
-loads the <var>form helper</var> and <var>URL helper</var> used by your view files. It also <samp>runs</samp>
-the validation routine. Based on
-whether the validation was successful it either presents the form or the success page.</p>
-
-<p><strong>Since you haven't told the validation class to validate anything yet, it returns "false" (boolean false) by default. The <samp>run()</samp>
-function only returns "true" if it has successfully applied your rules without any of them failing.</strong></p>
-
-
-<h2>Setting Validation Rules</h2>
-
-<p>CodeIgniter lets you set as many validation rules as you need for a given field, cascading them in order, and it even lets you prep and pre-process the field data
-at the same time. Let's see it in action, we'll explain it afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>In your <dfn>controller</dfn> (form.php), add this code just below the validation initialization function:</p>
-
-<code>$rules['username'] = "required";<br />
-$rules['password'] = "required";<br />
-$rules['passconf'] = "required";<br />
-$rules['email'] = "required";<br />
-<br />
-$this->validation->set_rules($rules);</code>
-
-<p>Your controller should now look like this:</p>
-
-<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="28"><?php
-
-class Form extends Controller {
-
- function index()
- {
- $this->load->helper(array('form', 'url'));
-
- $this->load->library('validation');
-
- $rules['username'] = "required";
- $rules['password'] = "required";
- $rules['passconf'] = "required";
- $rules['email'] = "required";
-
- $this->validation->set_rules($rules);
-
- if ($this->validation->run() == FALSE)
- {
- $this->load->view('myform');
- }
- else
- {
- $this->load->view('formsuccess');
- }
- }
-}
-?></textarea>
-
-<p><dfn>Now submit the form with the fields blank and you should see the error message.
-If you submit the form with all the fields populated you'll see your success page.</dfn></p>
-
-<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> The form fields are not yet being re-populated with the data when
-there is an error. We'll get to that shortly, once we're through explaining the validation rules.</p>
-
-
-<h2>Changing the Error Delimiters</h2>
-
-<p>By default, the system adds a paragraph tag (<p>) around each error message shown. You can easily change these delimiters with
-this code, placed in your controller:</p>
-
-<code>$this->validation->set_error_delimiters('<kbd><div class="error"></kbd>', '<kbd></div></kbd>');</code>
-
-<p>In this example, we've switched to using div tags.</p>
-
-<h2>Cascading Rules</h2>
-
-<p>CodeIgniter lets you pipe multiple rules together. Let's try it. Change your rules array like this:</p>
-
-
-<code>$rules['username'] = "required|min_length[5]|max_length[12]";<br />
-$rules['password'] = "required|matches[passconf]";<br />
-$rules['passconf'] = "required";<br />
-$rules['email'] = "required|valid_email";</code>
-
-<p>The above code requires that:</p>
-
-<ol>
-<li>The username field be no shorter than 5 characters and no longer than 12.</li>
-<li>The password field must match the password confirmation field.</li>
-<li>The email field must contain a valid email address.</li>
-</ol>
-
-<p>Give it a try!</p>
-
-<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> There are numerous rules available which you can read about in the validation reference.</p>
-
-
-<h2>Prepping Data</h2>
-
-<p>In addition to the validation functions like the ones we used above, you can also prep your data in various ways.
-For example, you can set up rules like this:</p>
-
-<code>$rules['username'] = "<kbd>trim</kbd>|required|min_length[5]|max_length[12]|<kbd>xss_clean</kbd>";<br />
-$rules['password'] = "<kbd>trim</kbd>|required|matches[passconf]|<kbd>md5</kbd>";<br />
-$rules['passconf'] = "<kbd>trim</kbd>|required";<br />
-$rules['email'] = "<kbd>trim</kbd>|required|valid_email";</code>
-
-<p>In the above example, we are "trimming" the fields, converting the password to MD5, and running the username through
-the "xss_clean" function, which removes malicious data.</p>
-
-<p class="important"><strong>Any native PHP function that accepts one parameter can be used as a rule, like <dfn>htmlspecialchars</dfn>,
-<dfn>trim</dfn>, <dfn>MD5</dfn>, etc.</strong></p>
-
-<p><strong>Note:</strong> You will generally want to use the prepping functions <strong>after</strong>
-the validation rules so if there is an error, the original data will be shown in the form.</p>
-
-<h2>Callbacks: Your own Validation Functions</h2>
-
-<p>The validation system supports callbacks to your own validation functions. This permits you to extend the validation class
-to meet your needs. For example, if you need to run a database query to see if the user is choosing a unique username, you can
-create a callback function that does that. Let's create a simple example.</p>
-
-<p>In your controller, change the "username" rule to this:</p>
-
-<code>$rules['username'] = "callback_username_check"; </code>
-
-<p>Then add a new function called <dfn>username_check</dfn> to your controller. Here's how your controller should look:</p>
-
-
-<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="44"><?php
-
-class Form extends Controller {
-
- function index()
- {
- $this->load->helper(array('form', 'url'));
-
- $this->load->library('validation');
-
- $rules['username'] = "callback_username_check";
- $rules['password'] = "required";
- $rules['passconf'] = "required";
- $rules['email'] = "required";
-
- $this->validation->set_rules($rules);
-
- if ($this->validation->run() == FALSE)
- {
- $this->load->view('myform');
- }
- else
- {
- $this->load->view('formsuccess');
- }
- }
-
- function username_check($str)
- {
- if ($str == 'test')
- {
- $this->validation->set_message('username_check', 'The %s field can not be the word "test"');
- return FALSE;
- }
- else
- {
- return TRUE;
- }
- }
-
-}
-?></textarea>
-
-<p>Reload your form and submit it with the word "test" as the username. You can see that the form field data was passed to your
-callback function for you to process.</p>
-
-<p><strong>To invoke a callback just put the function name in a rule, with "callback_" as the rule prefix.</strong></p>
-
-<p>The error message was set using the <dfn>$this->validation->set_message</dfn> function.
-Just remember that the message key (the first parameter) must match your function name.</p>
-
-<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> You can apply your own custom error messages to any rule, just by setting the
-message similarly. For example, to change the message for the "required" rule you will do this:</p>
-
-<code>$this->validation->set_message('required', 'Your custom message here');</code>
-
-<h2>Re-populating the form</h2>
-
-<p>Thus far we have only been dealing with errors. It's time to repopulate the form field with the submitted data.
-This is done similarly to your rules. Add the following code to your controller, just below your rules:</p>
-
-<code>$fields['username'] = 'Username';<br />
-$fields['password'] = 'Password';<br />
-$fields['passconf'] = 'Password Confirmation';<br />
-$fields['email'] = 'Email Address';<br />
-<br />
-$this->validation->set_fields($fields);</code>
-
-<p>The array keys are the actual names of the form fields, the value represents the full name that you want shown in the
-error message.</p>
-
-<p>The index function of your controller should now look like this:</p>
-
-
-<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="30">function index()
-{
- $this->load->helper(array('form', 'url'));
-
- $this->load->library('validation');
-
- $rules['username'] = "required";
- $rules['password'] = "required";
- $rules['passconf'] = "required";
- $rules['email'] = "required";
-
- $this->validation->set_rules($rules);
-
- $fields['username'] = 'Username';
- $fields['password'] = 'Password';
- $fields['passconf'] = 'Password Confirmation';
- $fields['email'] = 'Email Address';
-
- $this->validation->set_fields($fields);
-
- if ($this->validation->run() == FALSE)
- {
- $this->load->view('myform');
- }
- else
- {
- $this->load->view('formsuccess');
- }
-}</textarea>
-
-
-<p>Now open your <dfn>myform.php</dfn> view file and update the value in each field so that it has an attribute corresponding to its name:</p>
-
-
-<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="30">
-<html>
-<head>
-<title>My Form</title>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-<?php echo $this->validation->error_string; ?>
-
-<?php echo form_open('form'); ?>
-
-<h5>Username</h5>
-<input type="text" name="username" value="<?php echo $this->validation->username;?>" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Password</h5>
-<input type="text" name="password" value="<?php echo $this->validation->password;?>" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Password Confirm</h5>
-<input type="text" name="passconf" value="<?php echo $this->validation->passconf;?>" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Email Address</h5>
-<input type="text" name="email" value="<?php echo $this->validation->email;?>" size="50" />
-
-<div><input type="submit" value="Submit" /></div>
-
-</form>
-
-</body>
-</html>
-</textarea>
-
-
-<p>Now reload your page and submit the form so that it triggers an error. Your form fields should be populated
-and the error messages will contain a more relevant field name.</p>
-
-
-
-<h2>Showing Errors Individually</h2>
-
-<p>If you prefer to show an error message next to each form field, rather than as a list, you can change your form so that it looks like this:</p>
-
-
-<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="20">
-<h5>Username</h5>
-<?php echo $this->validation->username_error; ?>
-<input type="text" name="username" value="<?php echo $this->validation->username;?>" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Password</h5>
-<?php echo $this->validation->password_error; ?>
-<input type="text" name="password" value="<?php echo $this->validation->password;?>" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Password Confirm</h5>
-<?php echo $this->validation->passconf_error; ?>
-<input type="text" name="passconf" value="<?php echo $this->validation->passconf;?>" size="50" />
-
-<h5>Email Address</h5>
-<?php echo $this->validation->email_error; ?>
-<input type="text" name="email" value="<?php echo $this->validation->email;?>" size="50" /></textarea>
-
-<p>If there are no errors, nothing will be shown. If there is an error, the message will appear, wrapped in the delimiters you
-have set (<p> tags by default).</p>
-
-<p class="important"><strong>Note: </strong>To display errors this way you must remember to set your fields using the <kbd>$this->validation->set_fields</kbd>
-function described earlier. The errors will be turned into variables that have "_error" after your field name.
-For example, your "username" error will be available at:<br /><dfn>$this->validation->username_error</dfn>.</p>
-
-
-<h2>Rule Reference</h2>
-
-<p>The following is a list of all the native rules that are available to use:</p>
-
-
-
-<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="1" border="0" style="width:100%" class="tableborder">
-<tr>
-<th>Rule</th>
-<th>Parameter</th>
-<th>Description</th>
-<th>Example</th>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>required</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element is empty.</td>
-<td class="td"> </td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>matches</strong></td>
-<td class="td">Yes</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element does not match the one in the parameter.</td>
-<td class="td">matches[form_item]</td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>min_length</strong></td>
-<td class="td">Yes</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element is shorter then the parameter value.</td>
-<td class="td">min_length[6]</td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>max_length</strong></td>
-<td class="td">Yes</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element is longer then the parameter value.</td>
-<td class="td">max_length[12]</td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>exact_length</strong></td>
-<td class="td">Yes</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element is not exactly the parameter value.</td>
-<td class="td">exact_length[8]</td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>alpha</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than alphabetical characters.</td>
-<td class="td"> </td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>alpha_numeric</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than alpha-numeric characters.</td>
-<td class="td"> </td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>alpha_dash</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than alpha-numeric characters, underscores or dashes.</td>
-<td class="td"> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td"><strong>numeric</strong></td>
- <td class="td">No</td>
- <td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than numeric characters.</td>
- <td class="td"> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>integer</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than an integer.</td>
-<td class="td"> </td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>valid_email</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element does not contain a valid email address.</td>
-<td class="td"> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td"><strong>valid_emails</strong></td>
- <td class="td">No</td>
- <td class="td">Returns FALSE if any value provided in a comma separated list is not a valid email.</td>
- <td class="td"> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="td"><strong>valid_ip</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the supplied IP is not valid.</td>
-<td class="td"> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td"><strong>valid_base64</strong></td>
- <td class="td">No</td>
- <td class="td">Returns FALSE if the supplied string contains anything other than valid Base64 characters.</td>
- <td class="td"> </td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><strong>Note:</strong> These rules can also be called as discrete functions. For example:</p>
-
-<code>$this->validation->required($string);</code>
-
-<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> You can also use any native PHP functions that permit one parameter.</p>
-
-
-
-<h2>Prepping Reference</h2>
-
-<p>The following is a list of all the prepping functions that are available to use:</p>
-
-
-
-<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="1" border="0" style="width:100%" class="tableborder">
-<tr>
-<th>Name</th>
-<th>Parameter</th>
-<th>Description</th>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>xss_clean</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Runs the data through the XSS filtering function, described in the <a href="input.html">Input Class</a> page.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>prep_for_form</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Converts special characters so that HTML data can be shown in a form field without breaking it.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>prep_url</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Adds "http://" to URLs if missing.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>strip_image_tags</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Strips the HTML from image tags leaving the raw URL.</td>
-</tr><tr>
-
-<td class="td"><strong>encode_php_tags</strong></td>
-<td class="td">No</td>
-<td class="td">Converts PHP tags to entities.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> You can also use any native PHP functions that permit one parameter,
-like <kbd>trim</kbd>, <kbd>htmlspecialchars</kbd>, <kbd>urldecode</kbd>, etc.</p>
-
-
-<h2>Setting Custom Error Messages</h2>
-
-<p>All of the native error messages are located in the following language file: <dfn>language/english/validation_lang.php</dfn></p>
-
-<p>To set your own custom message you can either edit that file, or use the following function:</p>
-
-<code>$this->validation->set_message('<var>rule</var>', '<var>Error Message</var>');</code>
-
-<p>Where <var>rule</var> corresponds to the name of a particular rule, and <var>Error Message</var> is the text you would like displayed.</p>
-
-
-<h2>Dealing with Select Menus, Radio Buttons, and Checkboxes</h2>
-
-<p>If you use select menus, radio buttons or checkboxes, you will want the state of
-these items to be retained in the event of an error. The Validation class has three functions that help you do this:</p>
-
-<h2>set_select()</h2>
-
-<p>Permits you to display the menu item that was selected. The first parameter
-must contain the name of the select menu, the second parameter must contain the value of
-each item. Example:</p>
-
-<code>
-<select name="myselect"><br />
-<option value="one" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_select('myselect', 'one'); ?></dfn> >One</option><br />
-<option value="two" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_select('myselect', 'two'); ?></dfn> >Two</option><br />
-<option value="three" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_select('myselect', 'three'); ?></dfn> >Three</option><br />
-</select>
-</code>
-
-
-<h2>set_checkbox()</h2>
-
-<p>Permits you to display a checkbox in the state it was submitted. The first parameter
-must contain the name of the checkbox, the second parameter must contain its value. Example:</p>
-
-<code><input type="checkbox" name="mycheck" value="1" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_checkbox('mycheck', '1'); ?></dfn> /></code>
-
-
-<h2>set_radio()</h2>
-
-<p>Permits you to display radio buttons in the state they were submitted. The first parameter
-must contain the name of the radio button, the second parameter must contain its value. Example:</p>
-
-<code><input type="radio" name="myradio" value="1" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_radio('myradio', '1'); ?></dfn> /></code>
-
-
-
-
-
-</div>
-<!-- END CONTENT -->
-
-
-<div id="footer">
-<p>
-Previous Topic: <a href="user_agent.html">User Agent Class</a>
- ·
-<a href="#top">Top of Page</a> ·
-<a href="../index.html">User Guide Home</a> ·
-Next Topic: <a href="xmlrpc.html">XML-RPC Class</a>
-</p>
-<p><a href="http://codeigniter.com">CodeIgniter</a> · Copyright © 2006-2008 · <a href="http://ellislab.com/">Ellislab, Inc.</a></p>
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+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> +<head> + +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /> +<title>Form Validation : CodeIgniter User Guide</title> + +<style type='text/css' media='all'>@import url('../userguide.css');</style> +<link rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' media='all' href='../userguide.css' /> + +<script type="text/javascript" src="../nav/nav.js"></script> +<script type="text/javascript" src="../nav/prototype.lite.js"></script> +<script type="text/javascript" src="../nav/moo.fx.js"></script> +<script type="text/javascript" src="../nav/user_guide_menu.js"></script> + +<meta http-equiv='expires' content='-1' /> +<meta http-equiv= 'pragma' content='no-cache' /> +<meta name='robots' content='all' /> +<meta name='author' content='ExpressionEngine Dev Team' /> +<meta name='description' content='CodeIgniter User Guide' /> +</head> +<body> + +<!-- START NAVIGATION --> +<div id="nav"><div id="nav_inner"><script type="text/javascript">create_menu('../');</script></div></div> +<div id="nav2"><a name="top"></a><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="myHeight.toggle();"><img src="../images/nav_toggle_darker.jpg" width="154" height="43" border="0" title="Toggle Table of Contents" alt="Toggle Table of Contents" /></a></div> +<div id="masthead"> +<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" style="width:100%"> +<tr> +<td><h1>CodeIgniter User Guide Version 1.7</h1></td> +<td id="breadcrumb_right"><a href="../toc.html">Table of Contents Page</a></td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<!-- END NAVIGATION --> + + +<!-- START BREADCRUMB --> +<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" style="width:100%"> +<tr> +<td id="breadcrumb"> +<a href="http://codeigniter.com/">CodeIgniter Home</a> › +<a href="../index.html">User Guide Home</a> › +Form Validation +</td> +<td id="searchbox"><form method="get" action="http://www.google.com/search"><input type="hidden" name="as_sitesearch" id="as_sitesearch" value="codeigniter.com/user_guide/" />Search User Guide <input type="text" class="input" style="width:200px;" name="q" id="q" size="31" maxlength="255" value="" /> <input type="submit" class="submit" name="sa" value="Go" /></form></td> +</tr> +</table> +<!-- END BREADCRUMB --> + +<br clear="all" /> + + +<!-- START CONTENT --> +<div id="content"> + +<h1>Form Validation</h1> + +<p>Before explaining CodeIgniter's approach to data validation, let's describe the ideal scenario:</p> + +<ol> +<li>A form is displayed.</li> +<li>You fill it in and submit it.</li> +<li>If you submitted something invalid, or perhaps missed a required item, the form is redisplayed containing your data along with an error message describing the problem.</li> +<li>This process continues until you have submitted a valid form.</li> +</ol> + +<p>On the receiving end, the script must:</p> + +<ol> +<li>Check for required data.</li> +<li>Verify that the data is of the correct type, and meets the correct criteria. (For example, if a username is submitted +it must be validated to contain only permitted characters. It must be of a minimum length, +and not exceed a maximum length. The username can't be someone else's existing username, or perhaps even a reserved word. Etc.)</li> +<li>Sanitize the data for security.</li> +<li>Pre-format the data if needed (Does the data need to be trimmed? HTML encoded? Etc.)</li> +<li>Prep the data for insertion in the database.</li> +</ol> + + +<p>Although there is nothing complex about the above process, it usually requires a significant +amount of code, and to display error messages, various control structures are usually placed within the form HTML. +Form validation, while simple to create, is generally very messy and tedious to implement.</p> + +<dfn>CodeIgniter provides a comprehensive validation framework that truly minimizes the amount of code you'll write. +It also removes all control structures from your form HTML, permitting it to be clean and free of code.</dfn> + +<h2>Overview</h2> + +<p>In order to implement CodeIgniter's form validation you'll need three things:</p> + +<ol> +<li>A <a href="../general/views.html">View</a> file containing the form.</li> +<li>A View file containing a "success" message to be displayed upon successful submission.</li> +<li>A <a href="../general/controllers.html">controller</a> function to receive and process the submitted data.</li> +</ol> + +<p>Let's create those three things, using a member sign-up form as the example.</p> + +<h2>The Form</h2> + +<p>Using a text editor, create a form called <dfn>myform.php</dfn>. In it, place this code and save it to your <samp>applications/views/</samp> +folder:</p> + + +<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="30"><html> +<head> +<title>My Form</title> +</head> +<body> + +<?php echo $this->validation->error_string; ?> + +<?php echo form_open('form'); ?> + +<h5>Username</h5> +<input type="text" name="username" value="" size="50" /> + +<h5>Password</h5> +<input type="text" name="password" value="" size="50" /> + +<h5>Password Confirm</h5> +<input type="text" name="passconf" value="" size="50" /> + +<h5>Email Address</h5> +<input type="text" name="email" value="" size="50" /> + +<div><input type="submit" value="Submit" /></div> + +</form> + +</body> +</html> +</textarea> + + +<h2>The Success Page</h2> + + +<p>Using a text editor, create a form called <dfn>formsuccess.php</dfn>. In it, place this code and save it to your <samp>applications/views/</samp> +folder:</p> + + +<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="14"> +<html> +<head> +<title>My Form</title> +</head> +<body> + +<h3>Your form was successfully submitted!</h3> + +<p><?php echo anchor('form', 'Try it again!'); ?></p> + +</body> +</html> +</textarea> + + +<h2>The Controller</h2> + +<p>Using a text editor, create a controller called <dfn>form.php</dfn>. In it, place this code and save it to your <samp>applications/controllers/</samp> +folder:</p> + + +<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="21"><?php + +class Form extends Controller { + + function index() + { + $this->load->helper(array('form', 'url')); + + $this->load->library('validation'); + + if ($this->validation->run() == FALSE) + { + $this->load->view('myform'); + } + else + { + $this->load->view('formsuccess'); + } + } +} +?></textarea> + + +<h2>Try it!</h2> + +<p>To try your form, visit your site using a URL similar to this one:</p> + +<code>example.com/index.php/<var>form</var>/</code> + +<p><strong>If you submit the form you should simply see the form reload. That's because you haven't set up any validation +rules yet, which we'll get to in a moment.</strong></p> + + +<h2>Explanation</h2> + +<p>You'll notice several things about the above pages:</p> + +<p>The <dfn>form</dfn> (myform.php) is a standard web form with a couple exceptions:</p> + +<ol> +<li>It uses a <dfn>form helper</dfn> to create the form opening. +Technically, this isn't necessary. You could create the form using standard HTML. However, the benefit of using the helper +is that it generates the action URL for you, based on the URL in your config file. This makes your application more portable +and flexible in the event your URLs change.</li> + +<li>At the top of the form you'll notice the following variable: +<code><?php echo $this->validation->error_string; ?></code> + +<p>This variable will display any error messages sent back by the validator. If there are no messages it returns nothing.</p> +</li> +</ol> + +<p>The <dfn>controller</dfn> (form.php) has one function: <dfn>index()</dfn>. This function initializes the validation class and +loads the <var>form helper</var> and <var>URL helper</var> used by your view files. It also <samp>runs</samp> +the validation routine. Based on +whether the validation was successful it either presents the form or the success page.</p> + +<p><strong>Since you haven't told the validation class to validate anything yet, it returns "false" (boolean false) by default. The <samp>run()</samp> +function only returns "true" if it has successfully applied your rules without any of them failing.</strong></p> + + +<h2>Setting Validation Rules</h2> + +<p>CodeIgniter lets you set as many validation rules as you need for a given field, cascading them in order, and it even lets you prep and pre-process the field data +at the same time. Let's see it in action, we'll explain it afterwards.</p> + +<p>In your <dfn>controller</dfn> (form.php), add this code just below the validation initialization function:</p> + +<code>$rules['username'] = "required";<br /> +$rules['password'] = "required";<br /> +$rules['passconf'] = "required";<br /> +$rules['email'] = "required";<br /> +<br /> +$this->validation->set_rules($rules);</code> + +<p>Your controller should now look like this:</p> + +<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="28"><?php + +class Form extends Controller { + + function index() + { + $this->load->helper(array('form', 'url')); + + $this->load->library('validation'); + + $rules['username'] = "required"; + $rules['password'] = "required"; + $rules['passconf'] = "required"; + $rules['email'] = "required"; + + $this->validation->set_rules($rules); + + if ($this->validation->run() == FALSE) + { + $this->load->view('myform'); + } + else + { + $this->load->view('formsuccess'); + } + } +} +?></textarea> + +<p><dfn>Now submit the form with the fields blank and you should see the error message. +If you submit the form with all the fields populated you'll see your success page.</dfn></p> + +<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> The form fields are not yet being re-populated with the data when +there is an error. We'll get to that shortly, once we're through explaining the validation rules.</p> + + +<h2>Changing the Error Delimiters</h2> + +<p>By default, the system adds a paragraph tag (<p>) around each error message shown. You can easily change these delimiters with +this code, placed in your controller:</p> + +<code>$this->validation->set_error_delimiters('<kbd><div class="error"></kbd>', '<kbd></div></kbd>');</code> + +<p>In this example, we've switched to using div tags.</p> + +<h2>Cascading Rules</h2> + +<p>CodeIgniter lets you pipe multiple rules together. Let's try it. Change your rules array like this:</p> + + +<code>$rules['username'] = "required|min_length[5]|max_length[12]";<br /> +$rules['password'] = "required|matches[passconf]";<br /> +$rules['passconf'] = "required";<br /> +$rules['email'] = "required|valid_email";</code> + +<p>The above code requires that:</p> + +<ol> +<li>The username field be no shorter than 5 characters and no longer than 12.</li> +<li>The password field must match the password confirmation field.</li> +<li>The email field must contain a valid email address.</li> +</ol> + +<p>Give it a try!</p> + +<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> There are numerous rules available which you can read about in the validation reference.</p> + + +<h2>Prepping Data</h2> + +<p>In addition to the validation functions like the ones we used above, you can also prep your data in various ways. +For example, you can set up rules like this:</p> + +<code>$rules['username'] = "<kbd>trim</kbd>|required|min_length[5]|max_length[12]|<kbd>xss_clean</kbd>";<br /> +$rules['password'] = "<kbd>trim</kbd>|required|matches[passconf]|<kbd>md5</kbd>";<br /> +$rules['passconf'] = "<kbd>trim</kbd>|required";<br /> +$rules['email'] = "<kbd>trim</kbd>|required|valid_email";</code> + +<p>In the above example, we are "trimming" the fields, converting the password to MD5, and running the username through +the "xss_clean" function, which removes malicious data.</p> + +<p class="important"><strong>Any native PHP function that accepts one parameter can be used as a rule, like <dfn>htmlspecialchars</dfn>, +<dfn>trim</dfn>, <dfn>MD5</dfn>, etc.</strong></p> + +<p><strong>Note:</strong> You will generally want to use the prepping functions <strong>after</strong> +the validation rules so if there is an error, the original data will be shown in the form.</p> + +<h2>Callbacks: Your own Validation Functions</h2> + +<p>The validation system supports callbacks to your own validation functions. This permits you to extend the validation class +to meet your needs. For example, if you need to run a database query to see if the user is choosing a unique username, you can +create a callback function that does that. Let's create a simple example.</p> + +<p>In your controller, change the "username" rule to this:</p> + +<code>$rules['username'] = "callback_username_check"; </code> + +<p>Then add a new function called <dfn>username_check</dfn> to your controller. Here's how your controller should look:</p> + + +<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="44"><?php + +class Form extends Controller { + + function index() + { + $this->load->helper(array('form', 'url')); + + $this->load->library('validation'); + + $rules['username'] = "callback_username_check"; + $rules['password'] = "required"; + $rules['passconf'] = "required"; + $rules['email'] = "required"; + + $this->validation->set_rules($rules); + + if ($this->validation->run() == FALSE) + { + $this->load->view('myform'); + } + else + { + $this->load->view('formsuccess'); + } + } + + function username_check($str) + { + if ($str == 'test') + { + $this->validation->set_message('username_check', 'The %s field can not be the word "test"'); + return FALSE; + } + else + { + return TRUE; + } + } + +} +?></textarea> + +<p>Reload your form and submit it with the word "test" as the username. You can see that the form field data was passed to your +callback function for you to process.</p> + +<p><strong>To invoke a callback just put the function name in a rule, with "callback_" as the rule prefix.</strong></p> + +<p>The error message was set using the <dfn>$this->validation->set_message</dfn> function. +Just remember that the message key (the first parameter) must match your function name.</p> + +<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> You can apply your own custom error messages to any rule, just by setting the +message similarly. For example, to change the message for the "required" rule you will do this:</p> + +<code>$this->validation->set_message('required', 'Your custom message here');</code> + +<h2>Re-populating the form</h2> + +<p>Thus far we have only been dealing with errors. It's time to repopulate the form field with the submitted data. +This is done similarly to your rules. Add the following code to your controller, just below your rules:</p> + +<code>$fields['username'] = 'Username';<br /> +$fields['password'] = 'Password';<br /> +$fields['passconf'] = 'Password Confirmation';<br /> +$fields['email'] = 'Email Address';<br /> +<br /> +$this->validation->set_fields($fields);</code> + +<p>The array keys are the actual names of the form fields, the value represents the full name that you want shown in the +error message.</p> + +<p>The index function of your controller should now look like this:</p> + + +<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="30">function index() +{ + $this->load->helper(array('form', 'url')); + + $this->load->library('validation'); + + $rules['username'] = "required"; + $rules['password'] = "required"; + $rules['passconf'] = "required"; + $rules['email'] = "required"; + + $this->validation->set_rules($rules); + + $fields['username'] = 'Username'; + $fields['password'] = 'Password'; + $fields['passconf'] = 'Password Confirmation'; + $fields['email'] = 'Email Address'; + + $this->validation->set_fields($fields); + + if ($this->validation->run() == FALSE) + { + $this->load->view('myform'); + } + else + { + $this->load->view('formsuccess'); + } +}</textarea> + + +<p>Now open your <dfn>myform.php</dfn> view file and update the value in each field so that it has an attribute corresponding to its name:</p> + + +<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="30"> +<html> +<head> +<title>My Form</title> +</head> +<body> + +<?php echo $this->validation->error_string; ?> + +<?php echo form_open('form'); ?> + +<h5>Username</h5> +<input type="text" name="username" value="<?php echo $this->validation->username;?>" size="50" /> + +<h5>Password</h5> +<input type="text" name="password" value="<?php echo $this->validation->password;?>" size="50" /> + +<h5>Password Confirm</h5> +<input type="text" name="passconf" value="<?php echo $this->validation->passconf;?>" size="50" /> + +<h5>Email Address</h5> +<input type="text" name="email" value="<?php echo $this->validation->email;?>" size="50" /> + +<div><input type="submit" value="Submit" /></div> + +</form> + +</body> +</html> +</textarea> + + +<p>Now reload your page and submit the form so that it triggers an error. Your form fields should be populated +and the error messages will contain a more relevant field name.</p> + + + +<h2>Showing Errors Individually</h2> + +<p>If you prefer to show an error message next to each form field, rather than as a list, you can change your form so that it looks like this:</p> + + +<textarea class="textarea" style="width:100%" cols="50" rows="20"> +<h5>Username</h5> +<?php echo $this->validation->username_error; ?> +<input type="text" name="username" value="<?php echo $this->validation->username;?>" size="50" /> + +<h5>Password</h5> +<?php echo $this->validation->password_error; ?> +<input type="text" name="password" value="<?php echo $this->validation->password;?>" size="50" /> + +<h5>Password Confirm</h5> +<?php echo $this->validation->passconf_error; ?> +<input type="text" name="passconf" value="<?php echo $this->validation->passconf;?>" size="50" /> + +<h5>Email Address</h5> +<?php echo $this->validation->email_error; ?> +<input type="text" name="email" value="<?php echo $this->validation->email;?>" size="50" /></textarea> + +<p>If there are no errors, nothing will be shown. If there is an error, the message will appear, wrapped in the delimiters you +have set (<p> tags by default).</p> + +<p class="important"><strong>Note: </strong>To display errors this way you must remember to set your fields using the <kbd>$this->validation->set_fields</kbd> +function described earlier. The errors will be turned into variables that have "_error" after your field name. +For example, your "username" error will be available at:<br /><dfn>$this->validation->username_error</dfn>.</p> + + +<h2>Rule Reference</h2> + +<p>The following is a list of all the native rules that are available to use:</p> + + + +<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="1" border="0" style="width:100%" class="tableborder"> +<tr> +<th>Rule</th> +<th>Parameter</th> +<th>Description</th> +<th>Example</th> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>required</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element is empty.</td> +<td class="td"> </td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>matches</strong></td> +<td class="td">Yes</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element does not match the one in the parameter.</td> +<td class="td">matches[form_item]</td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>min_length</strong></td> +<td class="td">Yes</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element is shorter then the parameter value.</td> +<td class="td">min_length[6]</td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>max_length</strong></td> +<td class="td">Yes</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element is longer then the parameter value.</td> +<td class="td">max_length[12]</td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>exact_length</strong></td> +<td class="td">Yes</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element is not exactly the parameter value.</td> +<td class="td">exact_length[8]</td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>alpha</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than alphabetical characters.</td> +<td class="td"> </td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>alpha_numeric</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than alpha-numeric characters.</td> +<td class="td"> </td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>alpha_dash</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than alpha-numeric characters, underscores or dashes.</td> +<td class="td"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td class="td"><strong>numeric</strong></td> + <td class="td">No</td> + <td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than numeric characters.</td> + <td class="td"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>integer</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element contains anything other than an integer.</td> +<td class="td"> </td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>valid_email</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the form element does not contain a valid email address.</td> +<td class="td"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td class="td"><strong>valid_emails</strong></td> + <td class="td">No</td> + <td class="td">Returns FALSE if any value provided in a comma separated list is not a valid email.</td> + <td class="td"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="td"><strong>valid_ip</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Returns FALSE if the supplied IP is not valid.</td> +<td class="td"> </td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td class="td"><strong>valid_base64</strong></td> + <td class="td">No</td> + <td class="td">Returns FALSE if the supplied string contains anything other than valid Base64 characters.</td> + <td class="td"> </td> +</tr> +</table> + +<p><strong>Note:</strong> These rules can also be called as discrete functions. For example:</p> + +<code>$this->validation->required($string);</code> + +<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> You can also use any native PHP functions that permit one parameter.</p> + + + +<h2>Prepping Reference</h2> + +<p>The following is a list of all the prepping functions that are available to use:</p> + + + +<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="1" border="0" style="width:100%" class="tableborder"> +<tr> +<th>Name</th> +<th>Parameter</th> +<th>Description</th> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>xss_clean</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Runs the data through the XSS filtering function, described in the <a href="input.html">Input Class</a> page.</td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>prep_for_form</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Converts special characters so that HTML data can be shown in a form field without breaking it.</td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>prep_url</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Adds "http://" to URLs if missing.</td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>strip_image_tags</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Strips the HTML from image tags leaving the raw URL.</td> +</tr><tr> + +<td class="td"><strong>encode_php_tags</strong></td> +<td class="td">No</td> +<td class="td">Converts PHP tags to entities.</td> +</tr> + +</table> + +<p class="important"><strong>Note:</strong> You can also use any native PHP functions that permit one parameter, +like <kbd>trim</kbd>, <kbd>htmlspecialchars</kbd>, <kbd>urldecode</kbd>, etc.</p> + + +<h2>Setting Custom Error Messages</h2> + +<p>All of the native error messages are located in the following language file: <dfn>language/english/validation_lang.php</dfn></p> + +<p>To set your own custom message you can either edit that file, or use the following function:</p> + +<code>$this->validation->set_message('<var>rule</var>', '<var>Error Message</var>');</code> + +<p>Where <var>rule</var> corresponds to the name of a particular rule, and <var>Error Message</var> is the text you would like displayed.</p> + + +<h2>Dealing with Select Menus, Radio Buttons, and Checkboxes</h2> + +<p>If you use select menus, radio buttons or checkboxes, you will want the state of +these items to be retained in the event of an error. The Validation class has three functions that help you do this:</p> + +<h2>set_select()</h2> + +<p>Permits you to display the menu item that was selected. The first parameter +must contain the name of the select menu, the second parameter must contain the value of +each item. Example:</p> + +<code> +<select name="myselect"><br /> +<option value="one" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_select('myselect', 'one'); ?></dfn> >One</option><br /> +<option value="two" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_select('myselect', 'two'); ?></dfn> >Two</option><br /> +<option value="three" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_select('myselect', 'three'); ?></dfn> >Three</option><br /> +</select> +</code> + + +<h2>set_checkbox()</h2> + +<p>Permits you to display a checkbox in the state it was submitted. The first parameter +must contain the name of the checkbox, the second parameter must contain its value. Example:</p> + +<code><input type="checkbox" name="mycheck" value="1" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_checkbox('mycheck', '1'); ?></dfn> /></code> + + +<h2>set_radio()</h2> + +<p>Permits you to display radio buttons in the state they were submitted. The first parameter +must contain the name of the radio button, the second parameter must contain its value. Example:</p> + +<code><input type="radio" name="myradio" value="1" <dfn><?php echo $this->validation->set_radio('myradio', '1'); ?></dfn> /></code> + + + + + +</div> +<!-- END CONTENT --> + + +<div id="footer"> +<p> +Previous Topic: <a href="user_agent.html">User Agent Class</a> + · +<a href="#top">Top of Page</a> · +<a href="../index.html">User Guide Home</a> · +Next Topic: <a href="xmlrpc.html">XML-RPC Class</a> +</p> +<p><a href="http://codeigniter.com">CodeIgniter</a> · Copyright © 2006-2008 · <a href="http://ellislab.com/">Ellislab, Inc.</a></p> +</div> + +</body> </html>
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