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Jason Douglas de Oliveira commented on WW-2292:
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I don't want to skip the validation. Why I need the @Validation if the annotation related
with validation already turn on the validation mechanism?
the example is wrong?
Why I put an instruction where the bevariour already expected? like:
public class Customer{
public Customer(){ <-- WHY? I NEED
super(); <-- WHY? I NEED
}
}
So the example must show a case where the @Validation is really required, not?
> Validation occurs without need the @Validation annotation with Zero Configuration
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: WW-2292
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/struts/browse/WW-2292
> Project: Struts 2
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: Core Actions
> Affects Versions: 2.0.9, 2.0.11
> Environment: Windows XP 2600.xpsp_sp2_rtm.040803-2158 (SP2). Tomcat 6.0.14
> Reporter: Jason Douglas de Oliveira
> Fix For: 2.1.4
>
>
> When the action class has some annotation related with validation like: @RequiredStringValidator,
@StringLengthFieldValidator, @RequiredFieldValidator, etc. The action is validate without
need the @Validation annotation.
> I try too with @VisitorFieldValidator and the same behavior happen.
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