Checking validity of email in django/python [duplicate]

Solution 1:

from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
from django.core.validators import validate_email

value = "[email protected]"

try:
    validate_email(value)
except ValidationError as e:
    print("bad email, details:", e)
else:
    print("good email")

Solution 2:

UPDATE 2017: the code below is 7 years old and was since modified, fixed and expanded. For anyone wishing to do this now, the correct code lives around here.

Here is part of django.core.validators you may find interesting :)

class EmailValidator(RegexValidator):

    def __call__(self, value):
        try:
            super(EmailValidator, self).__call__(value)
        except ValidationError, e:
            # Trivial case failed. Try for possible IDN domain-part
            if value and u'@' in value:
                parts = value.split(u'@')
                domain_part = parts[-1]
                try:
                    parts[-1] = parts[-1].encode('idna')
                except UnicodeError:
                    raise e
                super(EmailValidator, self).__call__(u'@'.join(parts))
            else:
                raise

email_re = re.compile(
    r"(^[-!#$%&'*+/=?^_`{}|~0-9A-Z]+(\.[-!#$%&'*+/=?^_`{}|~0-9A-Z]+)*"  # dot-atom
    r'|^"([\001-\010\013\014\016-\037!#-\[\]-\177]|\\[\001-011\013\014\016-\177])*"' # quoted-string
    r')@(?:[A-Z0-9](?:[A-Z0-9-]{0,61}[A-Z0-9])?\.)+[A-Z]{2,6}\.?$', re.IGNORECASE)  # domain
validate_email = EmailValidator(email_re, _(u'Enter a valid e-mail address.'), 'invalid')

so if you don't want to use forms and form fields, you can import email_re and use it in your function, or even better - import validate_email and use it, catching possible ValidationError.

def validateEmail( email ):
    from django.core.validators import validate_email
    from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
    try:
        validate_email( email )
        return True
    except ValidationError:
        return False

And here is Mail::RFC822::Address regexp used in PERL, if you really need to be that paranoid.

Solution 3:

Ick, no, please, don't try to validate email addresses yourself. It's one of those things people never get right.

Your safest option, since you're already using Django, is to just take advantage of its form validation for email. Per the docs:

>>> from django import forms
>>> f = forms.EmailField()
>>> f.clean('[email protected]')
u'[email protected]'
>>> f.clean(u'[email protected]')
u'[email protected]'
>>> f.clean('invalid e-mail address')
...
ValidationError: [u'Enter a valid e-mail address.']

Solution 4:

You got it wrong, but it is a task that you can't do anyway. There is one and only one way to know if an RFC 2822 address is valid, and that is to send mail to it and get a response. Doing anything else doesn't improve the information content of your datum by even a fractional bit.

You also screw the human factor and acceptance property, for when you give validateEmail my address of

[email protected]

and you tell me I've made an error, I tell your application goodbye.

Solution 5:

I can see many answers here are based on django framework of python. But for verifying an email address why to install such an heavy software. We have the Validate_email package for Python that check if an email is valid, properly formatted and really exists. Its a light weight package (size < 1MB).

INSTALLATION :

pip install validate_email

Basic usage:

Checks whether email is in proper format.

from validate_email import validate_email
is_valid = validate_email('[email protected]')

To check the domain mx and verify email exists you can install the pyDNS package along with validate_email.

Verify email exists :

from validate_email import validate_email
is_valid = validate_email('[email protected]',verify=True)

Returns True if the email exist in real world else False.