Yes of course. I saw it only and it striked me as odd, because I used the inbuilt validator for the first time while playing around with some aspects of Tap which I never used before.
Most applications will check the email address serverside anyways, for example to exclude certain domains from which a registration shouldn't be possible. Regards, Otho 2009/1/6 Ulrich Stärk <u...@spielviel.de> > Well, you are free to write your own email validator and replace the > existing one in FieldValidatorSource with it. > > Cheers, > > Uli > > Otho schrieb: > > Thanks, I misread the regexp. then. But for all "real" email adresses >> which >> are not on the local host or network, the hostname should have at least >> one >> dot in it, regardless if it's an ip or a host with tld. >> >> 2009/1/5 Ulrich Stärk <u...@spielviel.de> >> >> Otho schrieb: >>> >>> It just occured to me that the email validator used with the @Validate >>>> annotation validates an email-address like 1...@1, which shouldn't be >>>> possible >>>> when looking at the source of the Validator. >>>> >>>> To my knowledge, 1 is a perfectly legal (although odd) host name and >>> thus >>> qualifies for the domain part of an email address. This is taken into >>> account by the domain part being an atom (which includes the digit 1) or >>> a >>> sequence of atoms seperated by dots. 1 for the local part is also legal. >>> >>> Uli >>> >>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org >>> For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org >>> >>> >>> >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tapestry.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tapestry.apache.org > >