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10Dev28534yHtml forms have a email property, but beyond that you need a regex on the server for verification
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Welcome to devRant. For future reference, this isn't a Q&A forum. Complain at shit and you'll do just fine
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Flygger19794yThe only real way of validating them any longer, apart from the presence of an @ with a string before and a string with one or more dots after, is to send it a mail and see if it works...
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You can basically do what the regex does manually.
Splice the parts into fragments and validate them each individually.
But I wouldn’t recommend it, since it can quickly go wrong, plus you HAVE to read the email spec like by line, otherwise it’s gonna be a shitty validator.
Also, keep in mind there are email alias like the google “+” suffix. You probably want to ban them, or validate against your db, too. -
Flygger19794y@iiii All domains (and IP addresses) have at least one dot in them, even without having subdomains ;)
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Do minimum with input type email and maybe regex that it contains @. That is enough. On backend send confirm your email address email to that address. If you don't want certain email addresses there are black list available.
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Flygger19794y@iiii more like an alias, also neither valid in emails or relevant to the subject ;)
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I found the answers here in this guy blog - https://tutorialscamp.com/how-to-va...
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Flygger19793yYou could also take a look at these arguments, and in general just the whole list of falsehoods ;)
https://github.com/kdeldycke/...
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