NAME

    Data::FormValidator::EmailValid - Data::FormValidator e-mail address
    constraint/filter

SYNOPSIS

      use Data::FormValidator::EmailValid qw(FV_email_filter FV_email);
    
      my $results = Data::FormValidator->check(
        {
          'email' => 'Graham TerMarsch <cpan@howlingfrog.com>',
        },
        {
          'required'      => [qw( email )],
          'field_filters' => {
            'email' => FV_email_filter(),
          },
          'constraint_methods' => {
            'email' => FV_email(),
          },
        },
      );

DESCRIPTION

    Data::FormValidator::EmailValid implements a constraint and filter for
    use with Data::FormValidator that do e-mail address
    validation/verification using Email::Valid.

    Although I generally find that I'm using the filter and constraint
    together, they've been separated so that you could use just one or the
    other (e.g. you may want to constrain on valid e-mail addresses without
    actually cleaning up or filtering any of the data provided to you by
    the user).

METHODS

    FV_email_filter(%options)

      Filter method which cleans up the given value and returns valid
      e-mail addresses (or nothing, if the value isn't a valid e-mail
      address).

      "Valid" is deemed to mean "looks like an e-mail"; no other tests are
      done to ensure that a valid MX exists or that the address is actually
      deliverable.

      This filter method automatically converts all e-mail addresses to
      lower-case. This behaviour can be disabled by passing through an
      lc=>0 option.

      You may also pass through any additional Email::Valid %options that
      you want to use; they're handed straight through to Email::Valid.

    FV_email(%options)

      Constraint method which checks to see if the value being constrained
      is a valid e-mail address or not. Returns true if the e-mail address
      is valid, false otherwise.

      This differs from the "email" constraint that comes with
      Data::FormValidator in that we not only check to make sure that the
      e-mail looks valid, but also that a valid MX record exists for the
      address. No other checks are done to ensure that the address is
      actually deliverable, however.

      You can also pass through any additional Email::Valid %options that
      you want to use; they're handed straight through to Email::Valid.

AUTHOR

    Graham TerMarsch (cpan@howlingfrog.com)

COPYRIGHT

    Copyright (C) 2007, Graham TerMarsch. All Rights Reserved.

    This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
    the same license as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO

    Data::FormValidator, Email::Valid.