if I decorate the properties of my ViewModels with attributes like this:
public class Vm
{
[Required]
[StringLength(35)]
public string Name {get;set;}
}
You could use the ErrorMessageResourceName property:
[Required(ErrorMessageResourceName = "SomeResource")]
[StringLength(30, ErrorMessageResourceName = "SomeOtherResource")]
public string Name { get; set; }
You may checkout this blog post for an example.
UPDATE:
In Application_Start
:
DefaultModelBinder.ResourceClassKey = "Messages";
And in the Messages.resx
file you need to add the custom error messages. Use Reflector to look at the System.Web.Mvc
and System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations
assemblies in order to see the key names to use.
There is a much better solution using asp.net MVC 3 these days incase someone is looking for a newer and far better approach.
http://blog.gauffin.org/2011/09/easy-model-and-validation-localization-in-asp-net-mvc3/
For example:
public class UserViewModel
{
[Required(ErrorMessageResourceName = "Required", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(Resources.LocalizedStrings))]
[LocalizedDisplayName(ErrorMessageResourceName = "UserId", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(Resources.LocalizedStrings))]
[LocalizedDescription(ErrorMessageResourceName = "UserIdDescription", ErrorMessageResourceType = typeof(Resources.LocalizedStrings))]
public int Id { get; set; }
}
SO related question - Mvc 3.0 DataAnnotations Localization