public class GuestResponse
{
[Required(ErrorMessage = "Please enter your name")]
public string Name { get; set; }
[Required(ErrorMessage = "Please enter your email address")]
[RegularExpression(".+\\@.+\\..+", ErrorMessage = "Please enter a valid email address")]
public string Email { get; set; }
[Required(ErrorMessage = "Please enter your phone number")]
public string Phone { get; set; }
[Required(ErrorMessage = "Please specify whether you'll attend")]
public bool? WillAttend { get; set; }
}
Tip As noted earlier, I used a nullable bool for the WillAttend property. I did this so that I could apply the
Required validation attribute. If I had used a regular bool, the value I received through model binding could be only true
or false, and I wouldn’t be able to tell if the user had selected a value. A nullable bool has three possible values: true,
false, and null. The null value will be used if the user hasn’t selected a value, and this causes the Required attribute
to report a validation error. This is a nice example of how the MVC Framework elegantly blends C# features with HTML and
HTTP.
5.1下测试,如果不定义为 bool? ,如果未选择,绑定后值为false,但验证也未通过,实际接收的值为“”值。