Created
December 3, 2013 20:55
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Validating a uuid4 with Python.
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from uuid import UUID | |
def validate_uuid4(uuid_string): | |
""" | |
Validate that a UUID string is in | |
fact a valid uuid4. | |
Happily, the uuid module does the actual | |
checking for us. | |
It is vital that the 'version' kwarg be passed | |
to the UUID() call, otherwise any 32-character | |
hex string is considered valid. | |
""" | |
try: | |
val = UUID(uuid_string, version=4) | |
except ValueError: | |
# If it's a value error, then the string | |
# is not a valid hex code for a UUID. | |
return False | |
# If the uuid_string is a valid hex code, | |
# but an invalid uuid4, | |
# the UUID.__init__ will convert it to a | |
# valid uuid4. This is bad for validation purposes. | |
return val.hex == uuid_string | |
if __name__ == '__main__': | |
# Valid uuid, generated by uuid4(): | |
x = '89eb35868a8247a4a911758a62601cf7' | |
print validate_uuid4(x) | |
# Same as above, except for the 17th charecter | |
# which is a valid hex string, but not a valid uuid4. | |
x = '89eb35868a8247a4c911758a62601cf7' | |
print validate_uuid4(x) |
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@apostolos Sure, validators typical tell you whether and object passes some criteria; cleaning or scrubbing your inputs is where you massage things to give the user a break on things like capitalization. Then you validate the massaged version.