Explicit Validation vs Implicit Validation
Developers should use explicit validation to ensure data quality, security, and reliability in applications, particularly in scenarios like web forms, API requests, or data processing pipelines where user input or external data must be sanitized meets developers should use implicit validation when building applications that require consistent data quality with minimal manual intervention, such as in web forms, api endpoints, or database operations. Here's our take.
Explicit Validation
Developers should use explicit validation to ensure data quality, security, and reliability in applications, particularly in scenarios like web forms, API requests, or data processing pipelines where user input or external data must be sanitized
Explicit Validation
Nice PickDevelopers should use explicit validation to ensure data quality, security, and reliability in applications, particularly in scenarios like web forms, API requests, or data processing pipelines where user input or external data must be sanitized
Pros
- +It helps prevent common vulnerabilities like injection attacks, improves error handling by providing clear feedback, and aligns with practices such as defensive programming and domain-driven design to enforce business constraints explicitly
- +Related to: input-sanitization, error-handling
Cons
- -Specific tradeoffs depend on your use case
Implicit Validation
Developers should use implicit validation when building applications that require consistent data quality with minimal manual intervention, such as in web forms, API endpoints, or database operations
Pros
- +It's particularly valuable in rapid development environments using modern frameworks like Django, Ruby on Rails, or Spring Boot, where it prevents common errors like invalid inputs or type mismatches by leveraging built-in validation features
- +Related to: data-validation, input-sanitization
Cons
- -Specific tradeoffs depend on your use case
The Verdict
Use Explicit Validation if: You want it helps prevent common vulnerabilities like injection attacks, improves error handling by providing clear feedback, and aligns with practices such as defensive programming and domain-driven design to enforce business constraints explicitly and can live with specific tradeoffs depend on your use case.
Use Implicit Validation if: You prioritize it's particularly valuable in rapid development environments using modern frameworks like django, ruby on rails, or spring boot, where it prevents common errors like invalid inputs or type mismatches by leveraging built-in validation features over what Explicit Validation offers.
Developers should use explicit validation to ensure data quality, security, and reliability in applications, particularly in scenarios like web forms, API requests, or data processing pipelines where user input or external data must be sanitized
Disagree with our pick? nice@nicepick.dev