respect-validation/docs/validators/KeyExists.md
Henrique Moody 81310cc4d9
Rename namespace Rules to Validators
Since that namespace contains our “validators”, naming it as such makes
much more sense.
2026-01-05 17:36:35 +01:00

2.4 KiB

KeyExists

  • KeyExists(int|string $key)

Validates if the given key exists in an array.

v::keyExists('name')->isValid(['name' => 'The Respect Panda']); // true
v::keyExists('name')->isValid(['email' => 'therespectpanda@gmail.com']); // false

v::keyExists(0)->isValid(['a', 'b', 'c']); // true
v::keyExists(4)->isValid(['a', 'b', 'c']); // false

v::keyExists('username')->isValid(new ArrayObject(['username' => 'therespectpanda'])); // true
v::keyExists(5)->isValid(new ArrayObject(['a', 'b', 'c'])); // false

Notes

  • To validate an array against a given validator if the key exists, use KeyOptional instead.
  • To validate an array against a given validator requiring the key to exist, use Key instead.

Templates

KeyExists::TEMPLATE_STANDARD

Mode Template
default {{subject}} must be present
inverted {{subject}} must not be present

Template placeholders

Placeholder Description
subject The validated input or the custom validator name (if specified).

Caveats

KeyExists defines the given $key as the path, and because it is a standalone validator without children, it's not possible to display a fully custom name with it.

When no custom name is set, the path is displayed as {{name}}. When a custom name is set, the validation engine prepends the path to the custom name:

v::keyExists('foo')->assert([]);
// Message: `.foo` must be present

v::named('Custom name', v::keyExists('foo'))->assert([]);
// Message: `.foo` (<- Custom name) must be present

If you want to display only a custom name while checking if a key exists, use Key with AlwaysValid:

v::key('foo', v::named('Custom name', v::alwaysValid())->assert([]);
// Message: Custom name must be present

Categorization

  • Arrays
  • Structures

Changelog

Version Description
3.0.0 Created from Key

See also: