Email and phone Number Validation in android
For Email Address Validation
private boolean isValidMail(String email) {
String EMAIL_STRING = "^[_A-Za-z0-9-\\+]+(\\.[_A-Za-z0-9-]+)*@"
+ "[A-Za-z0-9-]+(\\.[A-Za-z0-9]+)*(\\.[A-Za-z]{2,})$";
return Pattern.compile(EMAIL_STRING).matcher(email).matches();
}
OR
private boolean isValidMail(String email) {
return android.util.Patterns.EMAIL_ADDRESS.matcher(email).matches();
}
For Mobile Validation
For Valid Mobile You need to consider 7 digit to 13 digit because some country have 7 digit mobile number. If your main target is your own country then you can match with the length. Assuming India has 10 digit mobile number. Also we can not check like mobile number must starts with 9 or 8 or anything.
For mobile number I used this two Function:
private boolean isValidMobile(String phone) {
if(!Pattern.matches("[a-zA-Z]+", phone)) {
return phone.length() > 6 && phone.length() <= 13;
}
return false;
}
OR
private boolean isValidMobile(String phone) {
return android.util.Patterns.PHONE.matcher(phone).matches();
}
Use Pattern
package in Android to match the input validation for email and phone
Do like
android.util.Patterns.EMAIL_ADDRESS.matcher(input).matches();
android.util.Patterns.PHONE.matcher(input).matches();
Android has build-in patterns for email, phone number, etc, that you can use if you are building for Android API level 8 and above.
private boolean isValidEmail(CharSequence email) {
if (!TextUtils.isEmpty(email)) {
return Patterns.EMAIL_ADDRESS.matcher(email).matches();
}
return false;
}
private boolean isValidPhoneNumber(CharSequence phoneNumber) {
if (!TextUtils.isEmpty(phoneNumber)) {
return Patterns.PHONE.matcher(phoneNumber).matches();
}
return false;
}
Try this
public class Validation {
public final static boolean isValidEmail(CharSequence target) {
if (target == null) {
return false;
} else {
return android.util.Patterns.EMAIL_ADDRESS.matcher(target).matches();
}
}
public static final boolean isValidPhoneNumber(CharSequence target) {
if (target.length()!=10) {
return false;
} else {
return android.util.Patterns.PHONE.matcher(target).matches();
}
}
}