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Home/ Questions/Q 583579
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T14:48:28+00:00 2026-05-13T14:48:28+00:00

I wanted to write a regular expression using the ASP.Net RegExp validator that would

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I wanted to write a regular expression using the ASP.Net RegExp validator that would ensure a field contains only numeric and decimal values, and at least one character.

^[0-9]{1,40}(\.[0-9]{1,2})?$

Essentially: [0-9]{1,40} – meaning at least one to 40 numeric characters.

The ASP.Net regexp validator does not fire for an empty field – where there is not at least one character.

Work-around: using the custom validator with the regexp check in Javascript:

 function validateMinTrans(sender, args) {
        var error = true;
        var txtMinTrans = document.getElementById('TxtMinTrans');
        var regexp = new RegExp("^[0-9]{1,40}(\.[0-9]{1,2})?$");
        if (txtMinTrans.value.match(regexp)) {
            alert("good");
        }
        else {
            alert("bad");
        }

        if (error)
            args.IsValid = false;
        else
            args.IsValid = true;
    }

Thus, I don’t even have to check txtMinTrans.length == 0.

Wondering if anyone else has experienced this.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T14:48:28+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 2:48 pm

    The Regex validator does indeed not run unless the field has a value. However, you can also put a RequiredFieldValidator pointing to the same TextBox control, so both will handle their own responsibilities against it – empty and pattern.

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