NAME Validate::CodiceFiscale - Validate an Italian "Codice Fiscale" VERSION This document describes Validate::CodiceFiscale version 0.001. SYNOPSIS One-liner: $ perl -MValidate::CodiceFiscale=r -er RSSMRA98S03B833G Module usage: use Validate::CodiceFiscale qw< assert_valid_cf is_valid_cf validate_cf >; my $valid = 'RSSMRA98S03B833G'; my $invalid = 'RSICRL99C51C967X'; # the first does not warn, the second does warn eval { assert_valid_cf($valid); 1 } or warn "died: $@"; eval { assert_valid_cf($invalid); 1 } or warn "died: $@"; # plain boolean test, any error short-circuits if (is_valid_cf($cf)) { ... } # get everything that's wrong if (my $errors = validate_cf($invalid)) { say for $errors->@*; # array with error report, one line per error } # it's possible to pass additional validation options, like specific # data. All are optional, if present they're validate, otherwise # ignored. assert_valid_cf($cf, { data => { name => 'Foo', surname => 'Bar', sex => 'f', birthdate => '1998-03-11', birthplace => 'B833', } } ); # the assertion short-circuits by default, failing at the first # error. It's possible to check everyting and get a longer error # message, in case. assert_valid_cf($cf, { all_errors => 1 }); # it's also possible to wrap the error generation, by returning the # exception to throw assert_valid_cf($cf, { all_errors => 1, on_error => sub { my @errors = @_; return "number of errors: $n_errors\n"; } } ); # of course, it's possible to throw the exception directly use Ouch; assert_valid_cf($cf, { on_error => sub { ouch 400, $_[0] } }); DESCRIPTION This module performs partial validation of Italian Codice Fiscale, mainly at the syntactic level. For proper and legally acknowledged validation please refer to the official service by Agenzia delle Entrate at https://telematici.agenziaentrate.gov.it/VerificaCF/Scegli.do?parameter=verificaCf. At the basic level, it allows spotting common errors that might come from copying/typing the Codice Fiscale, e.g. typing a 0 (zero) instead of an uppercase o letter, or similar errors with other digits/letters. The validation can optionally take additional data regarding the name, surname, birth date, birth place, and sex to perform a more thorough validation based on the official rules. This part is subject to false positives for the following reasons: * Places are required to be entered as official codes, but there is no validation that the specific code was active at the date of birth in the Codice Fiscale. As an example, the $valid Codice Fiscale in the "SYNOPSIS" is syntactally valid, but otherwise impossible because code B833 disappeared in 1995 (two places were merged together). * The algorithm to generate the CodiceFiscale might lead to the same string for different people. This is accounted for by using a substitution of digits with letters, but only Agenzia delle Entrate can tell whether the specific person holds the specific variant of the code. So well... use it to spot negatives, but don't trust positives too much. INTERFACE There are three main functions for doing checks, each targeting a different style of use, plus an additional function that can be helpful for one-liners. assert_valid_cf assert_valid_cf($cf, %options); Check validity of the provided $cf and throw an exception if the check fails. By default, the exception is thrown: * using Carp's croak with a message containing a string joining all errors * as soon as one of the validation checks fails. Supported options: all_errors collect all errors to be fed into the exception, not only the first one. data pass additional data for validation, as a hash reference optionally containing keys name, surname, birthdate, sex, birthplace. on_error wrap the exception generation with a sub reference used as a callback with the following signature: sub (@error_strings) { ... } The sub can throw the exception itself; otherwise, its return value will be used as the argument for die. is_valid_cf my $boolean = is_valid_cf($cf, %options); Check the validity; it short-circuits at the first error. Returns a boolean value. It's possible to pass an additional key/value pair with key data and a hash reference optionally containing keys name, surname, birthdate, sex, birthplace. r $ perl -MValidate::CodiceFiscale=r -er RSSMRA98S03B833G The r function can be useful in one-liners to check one or more codes from the command line. By default, the r function will read input codes from @ARGV. validate_cf my $errors = validate_cf($cf, %options); Check the validity and return undef if no errors were encountered, or a reference to an array containing the list of errors otherwise. Supported options: all_errors collect all errors to be fed into the exception, not only the first one. This option defaults to a true value, to collect all errors; it's possible to pass a false value to short-circuit and exit at the first error. data pass additional data for validation, as a hash reference optionally containing keys name, surname, birthdate, sex, birthplace. SEE ALSO String::CodiceFiscale is an alternative and precedent module to deal with Codice Fiscale. I'm a bit scared about using a class method error to collect validation errors, hence this module. BUGS AND LIMITATIONS Minimum perl version 5.24. Report bugs through GitHub (patches welcome) at https://github.com/polettix/Validate-CodiceFiscale. AUTHOR Flavio Poletti COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright 2023 by Flavio Poletti Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.