Related
I want a user to input his name, but I want to limit the amount of characters to 15, in the desktop browsers it works.
document.querySelector('#input-name').addEventListener('keydown', function (e) {
const maxLetters = 15
document.querySelector('#input-name').addEventListener('keyup', function (e) {
userName = e.target.value
document.querySelector('#labelInputName').textContent = userName.length + "/" + maxLetters
})
userName = e.target.value
if (userName.length >= maxLetters && e.keyCode != 46 && e.keyCode != 8) {
e.preventDefault();
}
else if (e.keyCode != 46 && e.keyCode != 8) {
document.querySelector('#labelInputName').textContent = userName.length + 1 + "/" + maxLetters
}
})
So in the desktop browser it works after I am getting to 15/15 pressing any key from the keyboard except Delete and BackSpace won't do anything(won't even show the 16 character in the input field)...
But in the mobile browser I am getting to 15/15 and than keep going 16/15....
How can I fix that?
By far, the most cross-browser way to do this is with the maxlength attribute of the input element; no JavaScript required:
<input id="input-name" maxlength="15">
Live Example:
<input id="input-name" maxlength="15">
maxlength has been part of HTML basically forever (it's in the HTML+ spec from 1993), I expect browser support for it is universal.
If you need to set the max length from JavaScript, you'd use the maxLength property:
document.getElementById("input-name").maxLength = 15;
Live Example:
document.getElementById("input-name").maxLength = 15;
<input id="input-name">
How about a maxlength attribute which is supported for a long time? https://www.w3schools.com/tags/att_input_maxlength.asp
Is there a quick way to set an HTML text input (<input type=text />) to only allow numeric keystrokes (plus '.')?
JavaScript
You can filter the input values of a text <input> with the following setInputFilter function (supports Copy+Paste, Drag+Drop, keyboard shortcuts, context menu operations, non-typeable keys, the caret position, different keyboard layouts, validity error message, and all browsers since IE 9):
// Restricts input for the given textbox to the given inputFilter function.
function setInputFilter(textbox, inputFilter, errMsg) {
[ "input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(e) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
// Accepted value.
if ([ "keydown", "mousedown", "focusout" ].indexOf(e.type) >= 0){
this.classList.remove("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity("");
}
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (this.hasOwnProperty("oldValue")) {
// Rejected value: restore the previous one.
this.classList.add("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity(errMsg);
this.reportValidity();
this.value = this.oldValue;
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
else {
// Rejected value: nothing to restore.
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
You can now use the setInputFilter function to install an input filter:
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("myTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*\.?\d*$/.test(value); // Allow digits and '.' only, using a RegExp.
}, "Only digits and '.' are allowed");
Apply your preferred style to the input-error class. Here’s a suggestion:
.input-error{
outline: 1px solid red;
}
Note that you still must do server side validation!
Another caveat is that this will break the undo stack since it sets this.value directly.
This means that CtrlZ will not work to undo inputs after typing an invalid character.
Demo
See the JSFiddle demo for more input filter examples or run the Stack snippet below:
// Restricts input for the given textbox to the given inputFilter.
function setInputFilter(textbox, inputFilter, errMsg) {
[ "input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(e) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
// Accepted value.
if ([ "keydown", "mousedown", "focusout" ].indexOf(e.type) >= 0) {
this.classList.remove("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity("");
}
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (this.hasOwnProperty("oldValue")) {
// Rejected value: restore the previous one.
this.classList.add("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity(errMsg);
this.reportValidity();
this.value = this.oldValue;
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
else {
// Rejected value: nothing to restore.
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
// Install input filters.
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("intTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be an integer");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("uintTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be an unsigned integer");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("intLimitTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*$/.test(value) && (value === "" || parseInt(value) <= 500);
}, "Must be between 0 and 500");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("floatTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*[.,]?\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be a floating (real) number");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("currencyTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*[.,]?\d{0,2}$/.test(value);
}, "Must be a currency value");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("latinTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^[a-z]*$/i.test(value);
}, "Must use alphabetic latin characters");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("hexTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^[0-9a-f]*$/i.test(value);
}, "Must use hexadecimal characters");
.input-error {
outline: 1px solid red;
}
<h2>JavaScript input filter showcase</h2>
<p>Supports Copy+Paste, Drag+Drop, keyboard shortcuts, context menu operations, non-typeable keys, the caret position, different keyboard layouts, and all browsers since IE 9.</p>
<p>There is also a jQuery version of this.</p>
<table>
<tr>
<td>Integer</td>
<td><input id="intTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Integer >= 0</td>
<td><input id="uintTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Integer >= 0 and <= 500</td>
<td><input id="intLimitTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Float (use . or , as decimal separator)</td>
<td><input id="floatTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Currency (at most two decimal places)</td>
<td><input id="currencyTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>A-Z only</td>
<td><input id="latinTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Hexadecimal</td>
<td><input id="hexTextBox"></td>
</tr>
</table>
TypeScript
Here is a TypeScript version of this.
function setInputFilter(textbox: Element, inputFilter: (value: string) => boolean, errMsg: string): void {
["input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(this: (HTMLInputElement | HTMLTextAreaElement) & { oldValue: string; oldSelectionStart: number | null, oldSelectionEnd: number | null }) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(this, "oldValue")) {
this.value = this.oldValue;
if (this.oldSelectionStart !== null &&
this.oldSelectionEnd !== null) {
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
}
else {
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
jQuery
There is also a jQuery version of this. See this answer.
HTML5
HTML5 has a native solution with <input type="number"> (see the specification and documentation). The documentation has a working demo of this input type.
Instead of reading the value property, read the valueAsNumber property of the input to get the typed value as a number rather than a string.
Usage inside a <form> is recommended because validation is made easier this way; for example, pressing Enter will automatically show an error message if the value is invalid.
You can use the checkValidity method or the requestSubmit method on the entire form in order to explicitly check the validity.
Note that you might need to use the required attribute in order to disallow an empty input.
You can use the checkValidity method or the validity property on the input element itself in order to explicitly check the validity.
You can use reportValidity to show an error message and use setCustomValidity to set your own message.
This approach fundamentally has a different user experience: you are allowed to input invalid characters and the validation is performed separately.
This has the benefit that the undo stack (CtrlZ) won’t break.
Note that server-side validation must be performed, regardless, no matter which approach you choose.
But note that browser support varies:
Most browsers will only validate the input when submitting the form, and not when typing.
Most mobile browsers don’t support the step, min and max attributes.
Chrome (version 71.0.3578.98) still allows the user to enter the characters e and E into the field. Also see the Q&A Why does the HTML input with type="number" allow the letter e to be entered in the field?.
Firefox (version 64.0) and Edge (EdgeHTML version 17.17134) still allow the user to enter any text into the field.
Demo
document.querySelector("form").addEventListener("submit", (event) => {
event.preventDefault();
console.log(`Submit!
Number is ${event.target.elements.number.valueAsNumber},
integer is ${event.target.elements.integer.valueAsNumber},
form data is ${JSON.stringify(Object.fromEntries(new FormData(event.target).entries()))}.`);
})
label {
display: block;
}
<form>
<fieldset>
<legend>Get a feel for the UX here:</legend>
<label>Enter any number: <input name="number" type="number" step="any" required></label>
<label>Enter any integer: <input name="integer" type="number" step="1" required></label>
<label>Submit: <input name="submitter" type="submit"></label>
</fieldset>
</form>
Use this DOM
<input type='text' onkeypress='validate(event)' />
And this script
function validate(evt) {
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
// Handle paste
if (theEvent.type === 'paste') {
key = event.clipboardData.getData('text/plain');
} else {
// Handle key press
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
key = String.fromCharCode(key);
}
var regex = /[0-9]|\./;
if( !regex.test(key) ) {
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if(theEvent.preventDefault) theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
Here is a simple one which allows for exactly one decimal, but no more. The input event uses regex to replace text on the fly based on the two patterns:
Remove anything that's not a digit or a dot
Remove any second instance of a dot
<input type="text" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*?)\..*/g, '$1');" />
As someone commented below, the solution above does not handle leading zeros. If your particular use case requires that these are not allowed you can add to the pattern above like so:
<input type="text" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*?)\..*/g, '$1').replace(/^0[^.]/, '0');" />
That will allow 0.123 or .123 but not 0123 or 00.123.
I've searched long and hard for a good answer to this, and we desperately need <input type="number", but short of that, these 2 are the most concise ways I could come up with:
<input type="text"
onkeyup="this.value=this.value.replace(/[^\d]/,'')">
If you dislike the non-accepted character showing for a split-second before being erased, the method below is my solution. Note the numerous additional conditions, this is to avoid disabling all sorts of navigation and hotkeys. If anyone knows how to compactify this, let us know!
<input type="text"
onkeydown="return ( event.ctrlKey || event.altKey
|| (47<event.keyCode && event.keyCode<58 && event.shiftKey==false)
|| (95<event.keyCode && event.keyCode<106)
|| (event.keyCode==8) || (event.keyCode==9)
|| (event.keyCode>34 && event.keyCode<40)
|| (event.keyCode==46) )">
Most answers here all have the weakness of using key- events.
Many of the answers would limit your ability to do text selection with keyboard macros, copy+paste and more unwanted behavior, others seem to depend on specific jQuery plugins, which is killing flies with machineguns.
This simple solution seems to work best for me cross platform, regardless of input mechanism (keystroke, copy+paste, rightclick copy+paste, speech-to-text etc.). All text selection keyboard macros would still work, and it would even limit ones ability to set a non-numeric value by script.
function forceNumeric(){
var $input = $(this);
$input.val($input.val().replace(/[^\d]+/g,''));
}
$('body').on('propertychange input', 'input[type="number"]', forceNumeric);
HTML5 has <input type=number>, which sounds right for you. Currently, only Opera supports it natively, but there is a project that has a JavaScript implementation.
And one more example, which works great for me:
function validateNumber(event) {
var key = window.event ? event.keyCode : event.which;
if (event.keyCode === 8 || event.keyCode === 46) {
return true;
} else if ( key < 48 || key > 57 ) {
return false;
} else {
return true;
}
};
Also attach to keypress event
$(document).ready(function(){
$('[id^=edit]').keypress(validateNumber);
});
And HTML:
<input type="input" id="edit1" value="0" size="5" maxlength="5" />
Here is a jsFiddle example
HTML5 supports regexes, so you could use this:
<input id="numbersOnly" pattern="[0-9.]+" type="text">
Warning: Some browsers don't support this yet.
I opted to use a combination of the two answers mentioned here i.e.
<input type="number" />
and
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode
return !(charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57));
}
<input type="text" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event);">
JavaScript
function validateNumber(evt) {
var e = evt || window.event;
var key = e.keyCode || e.which;
if (!e.shiftKey && !e.altKey && !e.ctrlKey &&
// numbers
key >= 48 && key <= 57 ||
// Numeric keypad
key >= 96 && key <= 105 ||
// Backspace and Tab and Enter
key == 8 || key == 9 || key == 13 ||
// Home and End
key == 35 || key == 36 ||
// left and right arrows
key == 37 || key == 39 ||
// Del and Ins
key == 46 || key == 45) {
// input is VALID
}
else {
// input is INVALID
e.returnValue = false;
if (e.preventDefault) e.preventDefault();
}
}
additional you could add comma, period and minus (,.-)
// comma, period and minus, . on keypad
key == 190 || key == 188 || key == 109 || key == 110 ||
HTML
<input type="text" onkeydown="validateNumber(event);"/ >
2 solutions:
Use a form validator (for example with jQuery validation plugin)
Do a check during the onblur (i.e. when the user leaves the field) event of the input field, with the regular expression:
<script type="text/javascript">
function testField(field) {
var regExpr = new RegExp("^\d*\.?\d*$");
if (!regExpr.test(field.value)) {
// Case of error
field.value = "";
}
}
</script>
<input type="text" ... onblur="testField(this);"/>
// In a JavaScript function (can use HTML or PHP).
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode;
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
In your form input:
<input type=text name=form_number size=20 maxlength=12 onkeypress='return isNumberKey(event)'>
With input max. (These above allows for a 12-digit number)
You can use pattern for this:
<input id="numbers" pattern="[0-9.]+" type="number">
Here you can see the complete mobile website interface tips.
A safer approach is checking the value of the input, instead of hijacking keypresses and trying to filter keyCodes.
This way the user is free to use keyboard arrows, modifier keys, backspace, delete, use non standard keyboars, use mouse to paste, use drag and drop text, even use accessibility inputs.
The below script allows positive and negative numbers
1
10
100.0
100.01
-1
-1.0
-10.00
1.0.0 //not allowed
var input = document.getElementById('number');
input.onkeyup = input.onchange = enforceFloat;
//enforce that only a float can be inputed
function enforceFloat() {
var valid = /^\-?\d+\.\d*$|^\-?[\d]*$/;
var number = /\-\d+\.\d*|\-[\d]*|[\d]+\.[\d]*|[\d]+/;
if (!valid.test(this.value)) {
var n = this.value.match(number);
this.value = n ? n[0] : '';
}
}
<input id="number" value="-3.1415" placeholder="Type a number" autofocus>
EDIT: I removed my old answer because I think it is antiquated now.
One more example where you can add only numbers in the input field, can not letters
<input type="text" class="form-control" id="phone" name="phone" placeholder="PHONE" spellcheck="false" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*)\./g, '$1');">
Please find below mentioned solution. In this user can be able to enter only numeric value, Also user can not be able to copy, paste, drag and drop in input.
Allowed Characters
0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9
Not allowed Characters and Characters through events
Alphabetic value
Special characters
Copy
Paste
Drag
Drop
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#number').bind("cut copy paste drag drop", function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
});
});
function isNumberKey(evt) {
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode;
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
<link href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.3.7/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet"/>
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" class="form-control" name="number" id="number" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event)" placeholder="Enter Numeric value only">
Let me know if it not works.
If you want to suggest to the device (maybe a mobile phone) between alpha or numeric you can use <input type="number">.
A short and sweet implementation using jQuery and replace() instead of looking at event.keyCode or event.which:
$('input.numeric').live('keyup', function(e) {
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^0-9]/g, ''));
});
Only small side effect that the typed letter appears momentarily and CTRL/CMD + A seems to behave a bit strange.
JavaScript code:
function validate(evt)
{
if(evt.keyCode!=8)
{
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
key = String.fromCharCode(key);
var regex = /[0-9]|\./;
if (!regex.test(key))
{
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if (theEvent.preventDefault)
theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
}
HTML code:
<input type='text' name='price' value='0' onkeypress='validate(event)'/>
works perfectly because the backspace keycode is 8 and a regex expression doesn't let it, so it's an easy way to bypass the bug :)
just use type="number" now this attribute supporting in most of the browsers
<input type="number" maxlength="3" ng-bind="first">
A easy way to resolve this problem is implementing a jQuery function to validate with regex the charaters typed in the textbox for example:
Your html code:
<input class="integerInput" type="text">
And the js function using jQuery
$(function() {
$('.integerInput').on('input', function() {
this.value = this.value
.replace(/[^\d]/g, '');// numbers and decimals only
});
});
$(function() {
$('.integerInput').on('input', function() {
this.value = this.value
.replace(/[^\d]/g, '');// numbers and decimals only
});
});
<script
src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.2.4.min.js"
integrity="sha256-BbhdlvQf/xTY9gja0Dq3HiwQF8LaCRTXxZKRutelT44="
crossorigin="anonymous">
</script>
<input type="text" class="integerInput"/>
input type="number" is an HTML5 attribute.
In the other case this will help you:
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
<input type="number" name="somecode" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event)"/>
Just an other variant with jQuery using
$(".numeric").keypress(function() {
return (/\d/.test(String.fromCharCode(event.which) ))
});
I saw some great answers however I like them as small and as simple as possible, so maybe someone will benefit from it. I would use javascript Number() and isNaN functionality like this:
if(isNaN(Number(str))) {
// ... Exception it is NOT a number
} else {
// ... Do something you have a number
}
Hope this helps.
You can also compare input value (which is treated as string by default) to itself forced as numeric, like:
if(event.target.value == event.target.value * 1) {
// returns true if input value is numeric string
}
However, you need to bind that to event like keyup etc.
<input name="amount" type="text" value="Only number in here"/>
<script>
$('input[name=amount]').keyup(function(){
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^\d]/,''));
});
</script>
My solution for a better user experience:
HTML
<input type="tel">
jQuery
$('[type=tel]').on('change', function(e) {
$(e.target).val($(e.target).val().replace(/[^\d\.]/g, ''))
})
$('[type=tel]').on('keypress', function(e) {
keys = ['0','1','2','3','4','5','6','7','8','9','.']
return keys.indexOf(event.key) > -1
})
Details:
First of all, input types:
number shows up/down arrows shrinking the actual input space, I find them ugly and are only useful if the number represents a quantity (things like phones, area codes, IDs... don't need them)
tel provides similar browser validations of number without arrows
Using [number / tel] also helps showing numeric keyboard on mobile devices.
For the JS validation I ended up needing 2 functions, one for the normal user input (keypress) and the other for a copy+paste fix (change), other combinations would give me a terrible user experience.
I use the more reliable KeyboardEvent.key instead of the now deprecated KeyboardEvent.charCode
And depending of your browser support you can consider using Array.prototype.includes() instead of the poorly named Array.prototype.indexOf() (for true / false results)
Use this DOM:
<input type = "text" onkeydown = "validate(event)"/>
And this script:
validate = function(evt)
{
if ([8, 46, 37, 39, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 35, 36].indexOf(evt.keyCode || evt.which) == -1)
{
evt.returnValue = false;
if(evt.preventDefault){evt.preventDefault();}
}
}
...OR this script, without indexOf, using two for's...
validate = function(evt)
{
var CharValidate = new Array("08", "046", "039", "948", "235");
var number_pressed = false;
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++)
{
for (Ncount = 0; Ncount < parseInt(CharValidate[i].substring(0, 1)) + 1; Ncount++)
{
if ((evt.keyCode || evt.which) == parseInt(CharValidate[i].substring(1, CharValidate[i].lenght)) + Ncount)
{
number_pressed = true;
}
}
}
if (number_pressed == false)
{
evt.returnValue = false;
if(evt.preventDefault){evt.preventDefault();}
}
}
I used the onkeydown attribute instead of onkeypress, because the onkeydown attribute is checked before onkeypress attribute. The problem would be in the Google Chrome browser.
With the attribute "onkeypress", TAB would be uncontrollable with "preventDefault" on google chrome, however, with the attribute "onkeydown", TAB becomes controllable!
ASCII Code for TAB => 9
The first script have less code than the second, however, the array of ASCII characters must have all the keys.
The second script is much bigger than the first, but the array does not need all keys. The first digit in each position of the array is the number of times each position will be read. For each reading, will be incremented 1 to the next one. For example:
NCount = 0
48 + NCount = 48
NCount + +
48 + NCount = 49
NCount + +
...
48 + NCount = 57
In the case of numerical keys are only 10 (0 - 9), but if they were 1 million it would not make sense to create an array with all these keys.
ASCII codes:
8 ==> (Backspace);
46 => (Delete);
37 => (left arrow);
39 => (right arrow);
48 - 57 => (numbers);
36 => (home);
35 => (end);
This is an improved function:
function validateNumber(evt) {
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
if ((key < 48 || key > 57) && !(key == 8 || key == 9 || key == 13 || key == 37 || key == 39 || key == 46) ){
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if (theEvent.preventDefault) theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
Here is my simple solution for React users only, I couldn't find a better solution and made my own. 3 steps.
First, create a state.
const [tagInputVal, setTagInputVal] = useState("");
Then, use the state as input value (value={tagInputVal}) and pass the event to the onChange handler.
<input id="tag-input" type="text" placeholder="Add a tag" value={tagInputVal} onChange={(e) => onChangeTagInput(e)}></input>
Then, set the value of the event inside onChange handler.
function onChangeTagInput(e) {
setTagInputVal(e.target.value.replace(/[^\d.]/ig, ""));
}
Is there a quick way to set an HTML text input (<input type=text />) to only allow numeric keystrokes (plus '.')?
JavaScript
You can filter the input values of a text <input> with the following setInputFilter function (supports Copy+Paste, Drag+Drop, keyboard shortcuts, context menu operations, non-typeable keys, the caret position, different keyboard layouts, validity error message, and all browsers since IE 9):
// Restricts input for the given textbox to the given inputFilter function.
function setInputFilter(textbox, inputFilter, errMsg) {
[ "input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(e) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
// Accepted value.
if ([ "keydown", "mousedown", "focusout" ].indexOf(e.type) >= 0){
this.classList.remove("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity("");
}
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (this.hasOwnProperty("oldValue")) {
// Rejected value: restore the previous one.
this.classList.add("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity(errMsg);
this.reportValidity();
this.value = this.oldValue;
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
else {
// Rejected value: nothing to restore.
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
You can now use the setInputFilter function to install an input filter:
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("myTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*\.?\d*$/.test(value); // Allow digits and '.' only, using a RegExp.
}, "Only digits and '.' are allowed");
Apply your preferred style to the input-error class. Here’s a suggestion:
.input-error{
outline: 1px solid red;
}
Note that you still must do server side validation!
Another caveat is that this will break the undo stack since it sets this.value directly.
This means that CtrlZ will not work to undo inputs after typing an invalid character.
Demo
See the JSFiddle demo for more input filter examples or run the Stack snippet below:
// Restricts input for the given textbox to the given inputFilter.
function setInputFilter(textbox, inputFilter, errMsg) {
[ "input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(e) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
// Accepted value.
if ([ "keydown", "mousedown", "focusout" ].indexOf(e.type) >= 0) {
this.classList.remove("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity("");
}
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (this.hasOwnProperty("oldValue")) {
// Rejected value: restore the previous one.
this.classList.add("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity(errMsg);
this.reportValidity();
this.value = this.oldValue;
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
else {
// Rejected value: nothing to restore.
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
// Install input filters.
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("intTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be an integer");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("uintTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be an unsigned integer");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("intLimitTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*$/.test(value) && (value === "" || parseInt(value) <= 500);
}, "Must be between 0 and 500");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("floatTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*[.,]?\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be a floating (real) number");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("currencyTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*[.,]?\d{0,2}$/.test(value);
}, "Must be a currency value");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("latinTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^[a-z]*$/i.test(value);
}, "Must use alphabetic latin characters");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("hexTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^[0-9a-f]*$/i.test(value);
}, "Must use hexadecimal characters");
.input-error {
outline: 1px solid red;
}
<h2>JavaScript input filter showcase</h2>
<p>Supports Copy+Paste, Drag+Drop, keyboard shortcuts, context menu operations, non-typeable keys, the caret position, different keyboard layouts, and all browsers since IE 9.</p>
<p>There is also a jQuery version of this.</p>
<table>
<tr>
<td>Integer</td>
<td><input id="intTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Integer >= 0</td>
<td><input id="uintTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Integer >= 0 and <= 500</td>
<td><input id="intLimitTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Float (use . or , as decimal separator)</td>
<td><input id="floatTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Currency (at most two decimal places)</td>
<td><input id="currencyTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>A-Z only</td>
<td><input id="latinTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Hexadecimal</td>
<td><input id="hexTextBox"></td>
</tr>
</table>
TypeScript
Here is a TypeScript version of this.
function setInputFilter(textbox: Element, inputFilter: (value: string) => boolean, errMsg: string): void {
["input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(this: (HTMLInputElement | HTMLTextAreaElement) & { oldValue: string; oldSelectionStart: number | null, oldSelectionEnd: number | null }) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(this, "oldValue")) {
this.value = this.oldValue;
if (this.oldSelectionStart !== null &&
this.oldSelectionEnd !== null) {
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
}
else {
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
jQuery
There is also a jQuery version of this. See this answer.
HTML5
HTML5 has a native solution with <input type="number"> (see the specification and documentation). The documentation has a working demo of this input type.
Instead of reading the value property, read the valueAsNumber property of the input to get the typed value as a number rather than a string.
Usage inside a <form> is recommended because validation is made easier this way; for example, pressing Enter will automatically show an error message if the value is invalid.
You can use the checkValidity method or the requestSubmit method on the entire form in order to explicitly check the validity.
Note that you might need to use the required attribute in order to disallow an empty input.
You can use the checkValidity method or the validity property on the input element itself in order to explicitly check the validity.
You can use reportValidity to show an error message and use setCustomValidity to set your own message.
This approach fundamentally has a different user experience: you are allowed to input invalid characters and the validation is performed separately.
This has the benefit that the undo stack (CtrlZ) won’t break.
Note that server-side validation must be performed, regardless, no matter which approach you choose.
But note that browser support varies:
Most browsers will only validate the input when submitting the form, and not when typing.
Most mobile browsers don’t support the step, min and max attributes.
Chrome (version 71.0.3578.98) still allows the user to enter the characters e and E into the field. Also see the Q&A Why does the HTML input with type="number" allow the letter e to be entered in the field?.
Firefox (version 64.0) and Edge (EdgeHTML version 17.17134) still allow the user to enter any text into the field.
Demo
document.querySelector("form").addEventListener("submit", (event) => {
event.preventDefault();
console.log(`Submit!
Number is ${event.target.elements.number.valueAsNumber},
integer is ${event.target.elements.integer.valueAsNumber},
form data is ${JSON.stringify(Object.fromEntries(new FormData(event.target).entries()))}.`);
})
label {
display: block;
}
<form>
<fieldset>
<legend>Get a feel for the UX here:</legend>
<label>Enter any number: <input name="number" type="number" step="any" required></label>
<label>Enter any integer: <input name="integer" type="number" step="1" required></label>
<label>Submit: <input name="submitter" type="submit"></label>
</fieldset>
</form>
Use this DOM
<input type='text' onkeypress='validate(event)' />
And this script
function validate(evt) {
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
// Handle paste
if (theEvent.type === 'paste') {
key = event.clipboardData.getData('text/plain');
} else {
// Handle key press
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
key = String.fromCharCode(key);
}
var regex = /[0-9]|\./;
if( !regex.test(key) ) {
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if(theEvent.preventDefault) theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
Here is a simple one which allows for exactly one decimal, but no more. The input event uses regex to replace text on the fly based on the two patterns:
Remove anything that's not a digit or a dot
Remove any second instance of a dot
<input type="text" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*?)\..*/g, '$1');" />
As someone commented below, the solution above does not handle leading zeros. If your particular use case requires that these are not allowed you can add to the pattern above like so:
<input type="text" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*?)\..*/g, '$1').replace(/^0[^.]/, '0');" />
That will allow 0.123 or .123 but not 0123 or 00.123.
I've searched long and hard for a good answer to this, and we desperately need <input type="number", but short of that, these 2 are the most concise ways I could come up with:
<input type="text"
onkeyup="this.value=this.value.replace(/[^\d]/,'')">
If you dislike the non-accepted character showing for a split-second before being erased, the method below is my solution. Note the numerous additional conditions, this is to avoid disabling all sorts of navigation and hotkeys. If anyone knows how to compactify this, let us know!
<input type="text"
onkeydown="return ( event.ctrlKey || event.altKey
|| (47<event.keyCode && event.keyCode<58 && event.shiftKey==false)
|| (95<event.keyCode && event.keyCode<106)
|| (event.keyCode==8) || (event.keyCode==9)
|| (event.keyCode>34 && event.keyCode<40)
|| (event.keyCode==46) )">
Most answers here all have the weakness of using key- events.
Many of the answers would limit your ability to do text selection with keyboard macros, copy+paste and more unwanted behavior, others seem to depend on specific jQuery plugins, which is killing flies with machineguns.
This simple solution seems to work best for me cross platform, regardless of input mechanism (keystroke, copy+paste, rightclick copy+paste, speech-to-text etc.). All text selection keyboard macros would still work, and it would even limit ones ability to set a non-numeric value by script.
function forceNumeric(){
var $input = $(this);
$input.val($input.val().replace(/[^\d]+/g,''));
}
$('body').on('propertychange input', 'input[type="number"]', forceNumeric);
HTML5 has <input type=number>, which sounds right for you. Currently, only Opera supports it natively, but there is a project that has a JavaScript implementation.
And one more example, which works great for me:
function validateNumber(event) {
var key = window.event ? event.keyCode : event.which;
if (event.keyCode === 8 || event.keyCode === 46) {
return true;
} else if ( key < 48 || key > 57 ) {
return false;
} else {
return true;
}
};
Also attach to keypress event
$(document).ready(function(){
$('[id^=edit]').keypress(validateNumber);
});
And HTML:
<input type="input" id="edit1" value="0" size="5" maxlength="5" />
Here is a jsFiddle example
HTML5 supports regexes, so you could use this:
<input id="numbersOnly" pattern="[0-9.]+" type="text">
Warning: Some browsers don't support this yet.
I opted to use a combination of the two answers mentioned here i.e.
<input type="number" />
and
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode
return !(charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57));
}
<input type="text" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event);">
JavaScript
function validateNumber(evt) {
var e = evt || window.event;
var key = e.keyCode || e.which;
if (!e.shiftKey && !e.altKey && !e.ctrlKey &&
// numbers
key >= 48 && key <= 57 ||
// Numeric keypad
key >= 96 && key <= 105 ||
// Backspace and Tab and Enter
key == 8 || key == 9 || key == 13 ||
// Home and End
key == 35 || key == 36 ||
// left and right arrows
key == 37 || key == 39 ||
// Del and Ins
key == 46 || key == 45) {
// input is VALID
}
else {
// input is INVALID
e.returnValue = false;
if (e.preventDefault) e.preventDefault();
}
}
additional you could add comma, period and minus (,.-)
// comma, period and minus, . on keypad
key == 190 || key == 188 || key == 109 || key == 110 ||
HTML
<input type="text" onkeydown="validateNumber(event);"/ >
2 solutions:
Use a form validator (for example with jQuery validation plugin)
Do a check during the onblur (i.e. when the user leaves the field) event of the input field, with the regular expression:
<script type="text/javascript">
function testField(field) {
var regExpr = new RegExp("^\d*\.?\d*$");
if (!regExpr.test(field.value)) {
// Case of error
field.value = "";
}
}
</script>
<input type="text" ... onblur="testField(this);"/>
// In a JavaScript function (can use HTML or PHP).
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode;
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
In your form input:
<input type=text name=form_number size=20 maxlength=12 onkeypress='return isNumberKey(event)'>
With input max. (These above allows for a 12-digit number)
You can use pattern for this:
<input id="numbers" pattern="[0-9.]+" type="number">
Here you can see the complete mobile website interface tips.
A safer approach is checking the value of the input, instead of hijacking keypresses and trying to filter keyCodes.
This way the user is free to use keyboard arrows, modifier keys, backspace, delete, use non standard keyboars, use mouse to paste, use drag and drop text, even use accessibility inputs.
The below script allows positive and negative numbers
1
10
100.0
100.01
-1
-1.0
-10.00
1.0.0 //not allowed
var input = document.getElementById('number');
input.onkeyup = input.onchange = enforceFloat;
//enforce that only a float can be inputed
function enforceFloat() {
var valid = /^\-?\d+\.\d*$|^\-?[\d]*$/;
var number = /\-\d+\.\d*|\-[\d]*|[\d]+\.[\d]*|[\d]+/;
if (!valid.test(this.value)) {
var n = this.value.match(number);
this.value = n ? n[0] : '';
}
}
<input id="number" value="-3.1415" placeholder="Type a number" autofocus>
EDIT: I removed my old answer because I think it is antiquated now.
One more example where you can add only numbers in the input field, can not letters
<input type="text" class="form-control" id="phone" name="phone" placeholder="PHONE" spellcheck="false" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*)\./g, '$1');">
Please find below mentioned solution. In this user can be able to enter only numeric value, Also user can not be able to copy, paste, drag and drop in input.
Allowed Characters
0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9
Not allowed Characters and Characters through events
Alphabetic value
Special characters
Copy
Paste
Drag
Drop
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#number').bind("cut copy paste drag drop", function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
});
});
function isNumberKey(evt) {
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode;
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
<link href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.3.7/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet"/>
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" class="form-control" name="number" id="number" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event)" placeholder="Enter Numeric value only">
Let me know if it not works.
If you want to suggest to the device (maybe a mobile phone) between alpha or numeric you can use <input type="number">.
A short and sweet implementation using jQuery and replace() instead of looking at event.keyCode or event.which:
$('input.numeric').live('keyup', function(e) {
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^0-9]/g, ''));
});
Only small side effect that the typed letter appears momentarily and CTRL/CMD + A seems to behave a bit strange.
JavaScript code:
function validate(evt)
{
if(evt.keyCode!=8)
{
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
key = String.fromCharCode(key);
var regex = /[0-9]|\./;
if (!regex.test(key))
{
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if (theEvent.preventDefault)
theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
}
HTML code:
<input type='text' name='price' value='0' onkeypress='validate(event)'/>
works perfectly because the backspace keycode is 8 and a regex expression doesn't let it, so it's an easy way to bypass the bug :)
just use type="number" now this attribute supporting in most of the browsers
<input type="number" maxlength="3" ng-bind="first">
A easy way to resolve this problem is implementing a jQuery function to validate with regex the charaters typed in the textbox for example:
Your html code:
<input class="integerInput" type="text">
And the js function using jQuery
$(function() {
$('.integerInput').on('input', function() {
this.value = this.value
.replace(/[^\d]/g, '');// numbers and decimals only
});
});
$(function() {
$('.integerInput').on('input', function() {
this.value = this.value
.replace(/[^\d]/g, '');// numbers and decimals only
});
});
<script
src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.2.4.min.js"
integrity="sha256-BbhdlvQf/xTY9gja0Dq3HiwQF8LaCRTXxZKRutelT44="
crossorigin="anonymous">
</script>
<input type="text" class="integerInput"/>
input type="number" is an HTML5 attribute.
In the other case this will help you:
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
<input type="number" name="somecode" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event)"/>
Just an other variant with jQuery using
$(".numeric").keypress(function() {
return (/\d/.test(String.fromCharCode(event.which) ))
});
I saw some great answers however I like them as small and as simple as possible, so maybe someone will benefit from it. I would use javascript Number() and isNaN functionality like this:
if(isNaN(Number(str))) {
// ... Exception it is NOT a number
} else {
// ... Do something you have a number
}
Hope this helps.
You can also compare input value (which is treated as string by default) to itself forced as numeric, like:
if(event.target.value == event.target.value * 1) {
// returns true if input value is numeric string
}
However, you need to bind that to event like keyup etc.
<input name="amount" type="text" value="Only number in here"/>
<script>
$('input[name=amount]').keyup(function(){
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^\d]/,''));
});
</script>
My solution for a better user experience:
HTML
<input type="tel">
jQuery
$('[type=tel]').on('change', function(e) {
$(e.target).val($(e.target).val().replace(/[^\d\.]/g, ''))
})
$('[type=tel]').on('keypress', function(e) {
keys = ['0','1','2','3','4','5','6','7','8','9','.']
return keys.indexOf(event.key) > -1
})
Details:
First of all, input types:
number shows up/down arrows shrinking the actual input space, I find them ugly and are only useful if the number represents a quantity (things like phones, area codes, IDs... don't need them)
tel provides similar browser validations of number without arrows
Using [number / tel] also helps showing numeric keyboard on mobile devices.
For the JS validation I ended up needing 2 functions, one for the normal user input (keypress) and the other for a copy+paste fix (change), other combinations would give me a terrible user experience.
I use the more reliable KeyboardEvent.key instead of the now deprecated KeyboardEvent.charCode
And depending of your browser support you can consider using Array.prototype.includes() instead of the poorly named Array.prototype.indexOf() (for true / false results)
Use this DOM:
<input type = "text" onkeydown = "validate(event)"/>
And this script:
validate = function(evt)
{
if ([8, 46, 37, 39, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 35, 36].indexOf(evt.keyCode || evt.which) == -1)
{
evt.returnValue = false;
if(evt.preventDefault){evt.preventDefault();}
}
}
...OR this script, without indexOf, using two for's...
validate = function(evt)
{
var CharValidate = new Array("08", "046", "039", "948", "235");
var number_pressed = false;
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++)
{
for (Ncount = 0; Ncount < parseInt(CharValidate[i].substring(0, 1)) + 1; Ncount++)
{
if ((evt.keyCode || evt.which) == parseInt(CharValidate[i].substring(1, CharValidate[i].lenght)) + Ncount)
{
number_pressed = true;
}
}
}
if (number_pressed == false)
{
evt.returnValue = false;
if(evt.preventDefault){evt.preventDefault();}
}
}
I used the onkeydown attribute instead of onkeypress, because the onkeydown attribute is checked before onkeypress attribute. The problem would be in the Google Chrome browser.
With the attribute "onkeypress", TAB would be uncontrollable with "preventDefault" on google chrome, however, with the attribute "onkeydown", TAB becomes controllable!
ASCII Code for TAB => 9
The first script have less code than the second, however, the array of ASCII characters must have all the keys.
The second script is much bigger than the first, but the array does not need all keys. The first digit in each position of the array is the number of times each position will be read. For each reading, will be incremented 1 to the next one. For example:
NCount = 0
48 + NCount = 48
NCount + +
48 + NCount = 49
NCount + +
...
48 + NCount = 57
In the case of numerical keys are only 10 (0 - 9), but if they were 1 million it would not make sense to create an array with all these keys.
ASCII codes:
8 ==> (Backspace);
46 => (Delete);
37 => (left arrow);
39 => (right arrow);
48 - 57 => (numbers);
36 => (home);
35 => (end);
This is an improved function:
function validateNumber(evt) {
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
if ((key < 48 || key > 57) && !(key == 8 || key == 9 || key == 13 || key == 37 || key == 39 || key == 46) ){
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if (theEvent.preventDefault) theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
Here is my simple solution for React users only, I couldn't find a better solution and made my own. 3 steps.
First, create a state.
const [tagInputVal, setTagInputVal] = useState("");
Then, use the state as input value (value={tagInputVal}) and pass the event to the onChange handler.
<input id="tag-input" type="text" placeholder="Add a tag" value={tagInputVal} onChange={(e) => onChangeTagInput(e)}></input>
Then, set the value of the event inside onChange handler.
function onChangeTagInput(e) {
setTagInputVal(e.target.value.replace(/[^\d.]/ig, ""));
}
I have a phone number input that I am trying to get the dashes to appear in the number as the user types.
I am wanting the number to appear as 555-555-5555.
The function works for the most part, but the dashes aren't entered until after the whole number is entered. I am using the keyup function, which I thought would solve this, but no luck.
Does anyone have any recommendations as to what I have to do to get the dashes to be entered as the user types in the digits?
$('#phone').keyup(function() {
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/(\d{3})\-?(\d{3})\-?(\d{4})/,'$1-$2-$3'))
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div>
<label class="contact-label">Phone Number:</label>
<input type="tel" class="contact_input" name="phone" id="phone">
</div>
I modified your code slightly to produce something that I think is a little easier to read, but still does the job.
I just evaluated the length of the <input /> tag's value on each .keyup() event and then augmented the value accordingly. Take a look at the snippet below:
--UPDATE--
After comments regarding backspacing issues I added a couple lines of code that seem to fix the issue:
First I checked for either backspace or delete .keyup() events to prevent the formatting code from interfering with correcting errors in the number.
I also added a few checks, and a global formatFlag variable to ensure that if the user backspaces to an awkward index like 3 or 6(where hyphens would normally be added), that formatting would resume as normal on the next .keyup() event.
let formatFlag = false;
$(function(){
$('#phone').keyup(function(evt) {
let modifiedValue = $(this).val().replace(/-/g, "");
if(evt.keyCode == 8 || evt.keyCode == 46) { //8 == backspace; 46 == delete
//Checks whether the user backspaced to a hyphen index
if(modifiedValue.length === 3 || modifiedValue.length === 6) {
//Checks whether there is already a hyphen
if($(this).val().charAt($(this).val().length - 1) !== '-') {
formatFlag = true; //Sets the format flag so that hyphen is appended on next keyup()
} else {
return false; //Hyphen already present, no formatting necessary
}
} else {
formatFlag = false;
}
return false; //Return if backspace or delete is pressed to avoid awkward formatting
}
if(!!formatFlag) {
// This re-formats the number after the formatFlag has been set,
// appending a hyphen to the second last position in the string
$(this).val($(this).val().slice(0, $(this).val().length - 1) + '-' +
$(this).val().slice($(this).val().length - 1));
formatFlag = false; //Reset the formatFlag
}
if(modifiedValue.length % 3 == 0) {
if(modifiedValue.length === 0 || modifiedValue.length >= 9){
return false;
} else {
$(this).val($(this).val() + '-');
return;
}
}
});
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div>
<label class="contact-label">Phone Number:</label>
<input type="tel" class="contact_input" name="phone" id="phone" />
</div>
Is there a quick way to set an HTML text input (<input type=text />) to only allow numeric keystrokes (plus '.')?
JavaScript
You can filter the input values of a text <input> with the following setInputFilter function (supports Copy+Paste, Drag+Drop, keyboard shortcuts, context menu operations, non-typeable keys, the caret position, different keyboard layouts, validity error message, and all browsers since IE 9):
// Restricts input for the given textbox to the given inputFilter function.
function setInputFilter(textbox, inputFilter, errMsg) {
[ "input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(e) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
// Accepted value.
if ([ "keydown", "mousedown", "focusout" ].indexOf(e.type) >= 0){
this.classList.remove("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity("");
}
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (this.hasOwnProperty("oldValue")) {
// Rejected value: restore the previous one.
this.classList.add("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity(errMsg);
this.reportValidity();
this.value = this.oldValue;
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
else {
// Rejected value: nothing to restore.
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
You can now use the setInputFilter function to install an input filter:
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("myTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*\.?\d*$/.test(value); // Allow digits and '.' only, using a RegExp.
}, "Only digits and '.' are allowed");
Apply your preferred style to the input-error class. Here’s a suggestion:
.input-error{
outline: 1px solid red;
}
Note that you still must do server side validation!
Another caveat is that this will break the undo stack since it sets this.value directly.
This means that CtrlZ will not work to undo inputs after typing an invalid character.
Demo
See the JSFiddle demo for more input filter examples or run the Stack snippet below:
// Restricts input for the given textbox to the given inputFilter.
function setInputFilter(textbox, inputFilter, errMsg) {
[ "input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(e) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
// Accepted value.
if ([ "keydown", "mousedown", "focusout" ].indexOf(e.type) >= 0) {
this.classList.remove("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity("");
}
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (this.hasOwnProperty("oldValue")) {
// Rejected value: restore the previous one.
this.classList.add("input-error");
this.setCustomValidity(errMsg);
this.reportValidity();
this.value = this.oldValue;
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
else {
// Rejected value: nothing to restore.
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
// Install input filters.
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("intTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be an integer");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("uintTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be an unsigned integer");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("intLimitTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^\d*$/.test(value) && (value === "" || parseInt(value) <= 500);
}, "Must be between 0 and 500");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("floatTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*[.,]?\d*$/.test(value);
}, "Must be a floating (real) number");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("currencyTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^-?\d*[.,]?\d{0,2}$/.test(value);
}, "Must be a currency value");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("latinTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^[a-z]*$/i.test(value);
}, "Must use alphabetic latin characters");
setInputFilter(document.getElementById("hexTextBox"), function(value) {
return /^[0-9a-f]*$/i.test(value);
}, "Must use hexadecimal characters");
.input-error {
outline: 1px solid red;
}
<h2>JavaScript input filter showcase</h2>
<p>Supports Copy+Paste, Drag+Drop, keyboard shortcuts, context menu operations, non-typeable keys, the caret position, different keyboard layouts, and all browsers since IE 9.</p>
<p>There is also a jQuery version of this.</p>
<table>
<tr>
<td>Integer</td>
<td><input id="intTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Integer >= 0</td>
<td><input id="uintTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Integer >= 0 and <= 500</td>
<td><input id="intLimitTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Float (use . or , as decimal separator)</td>
<td><input id="floatTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Currency (at most two decimal places)</td>
<td><input id="currencyTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>A-Z only</td>
<td><input id="latinTextBox"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Hexadecimal</td>
<td><input id="hexTextBox"></td>
</tr>
</table>
TypeScript
Here is a TypeScript version of this.
function setInputFilter(textbox: Element, inputFilter: (value: string) => boolean, errMsg: string): void {
["input", "keydown", "keyup", "mousedown", "mouseup", "select", "contextmenu", "drop", "focusout" ].forEach(function(event) {
textbox.addEventListener(event, function(this: (HTMLInputElement | HTMLTextAreaElement) & { oldValue: string; oldSelectionStart: number | null, oldSelectionEnd: number | null }) {
if (inputFilter(this.value)) {
this.oldValue = this.value;
this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
}
else if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(this, "oldValue")) {
this.value = this.oldValue;
if (this.oldSelectionStart !== null &&
this.oldSelectionEnd !== null) {
this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
}
}
else {
this.value = "";
}
});
});
}
jQuery
There is also a jQuery version of this. See this answer.
HTML5
HTML5 has a native solution with <input type="number"> (see the specification and documentation). The documentation has a working demo of this input type.
Instead of reading the value property, read the valueAsNumber property of the input to get the typed value as a number rather than a string.
Usage inside a <form> is recommended because validation is made easier this way; for example, pressing Enter will automatically show an error message if the value is invalid.
You can use the checkValidity method or the requestSubmit method on the entire form in order to explicitly check the validity.
Note that you might need to use the required attribute in order to disallow an empty input.
You can use the checkValidity method or the validity property on the input element itself in order to explicitly check the validity.
You can use reportValidity to show an error message and use setCustomValidity to set your own message.
This approach fundamentally has a different user experience: you are allowed to input invalid characters and the validation is performed separately.
This has the benefit that the undo stack (CtrlZ) won’t break.
Note that server-side validation must be performed, regardless, no matter which approach you choose.
But note that browser support varies:
Most browsers will only validate the input when submitting the form, and not when typing.
Most mobile browsers don’t support the step, min and max attributes.
Chrome (version 71.0.3578.98) still allows the user to enter the characters e and E into the field. Also see the Q&A Why does the HTML input with type="number" allow the letter e to be entered in the field?.
Firefox (version 64.0) and Edge (EdgeHTML version 17.17134) still allow the user to enter any text into the field.
Demo
document.querySelector("form").addEventListener("submit", (event) => {
event.preventDefault();
console.log(`Submit!
Number is ${event.target.elements.number.valueAsNumber},
integer is ${event.target.elements.integer.valueAsNumber},
form data is ${JSON.stringify(Object.fromEntries(new FormData(event.target).entries()))}.`);
})
label {
display: block;
}
<form>
<fieldset>
<legend>Get a feel for the UX here:</legend>
<label>Enter any number: <input name="number" type="number" step="any" required></label>
<label>Enter any integer: <input name="integer" type="number" step="1" required></label>
<label>Submit: <input name="submitter" type="submit"></label>
</fieldset>
</form>
Use this DOM
<input type='text' onkeypress='validate(event)' />
And this script
function validate(evt) {
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
// Handle paste
if (theEvent.type === 'paste') {
key = event.clipboardData.getData('text/plain');
} else {
// Handle key press
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
key = String.fromCharCode(key);
}
var regex = /[0-9]|\./;
if( !regex.test(key) ) {
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if(theEvent.preventDefault) theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
Here is a simple one which allows for exactly one decimal, but no more. The input event uses regex to replace text on the fly based on the two patterns:
Remove anything that's not a digit or a dot
Remove any second instance of a dot
<input type="text" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*?)\..*/g, '$1');" />
As someone commented below, the solution above does not handle leading zeros. If your particular use case requires that these are not allowed you can add to the pattern above like so:
<input type="text" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*?)\..*/g, '$1').replace(/^0[^.]/, '0');" />
That will allow 0.123 or .123 but not 0123 or 00.123.
I've searched long and hard for a good answer to this, and we desperately need <input type="number", but short of that, these 2 are the most concise ways I could come up with:
<input type="text"
onkeyup="this.value=this.value.replace(/[^\d]/,'')">
If you dislike the non-accepted character showing for a split-second before being erased, the method below is my solution. Note the numerous additional conditions, this is to avoid disabling all sorts of navigation and hotkeys. If anyone knows how to compactify this, let us know!
<input type="text"
onkeydown="return ( event.ctrlKey || event.altKey
|| (47<event.keyCode && event.keyCode<58 && event.shiftKey==false)
|| (95<event.keyCode && event.keyCode<106)
|| (event.keyCode==8) || (event.keyCode==9)
|| (event.keyCode>34 && event.keyCode<40)
|| (event.keyCode==46) )">
Most answers here all have the weakness of using key- events.
Many of the answers would limit your ability to do text selection with keyboard macros, copy+paste and more unwanted behavior, others seem to depend on specific jQuery plugins, which is killing flies with machineguns.
This simple solution seems to work best for me cross platform, regardless of input mechanism (keystroke, copy+paste, rightclick copy+paste, speech-to-text etc.). All text selection keyboard macros would still work, and it would even limit ones ability to set a non-numeric value by script.
function forceNumeric(){
var $input = $(this);
$input.val($input.val().replace(/[^\d]+/g,''));
}
$('body').on('propertychange input', 'input[type="number"]', forceNumeric);
HTML5 has <input type=number>, which sounds right for you. Currently, only Opera supports it natively, but there is a project that has a JavaScript implementation.
And one more example, which works great for me:
function validateNumber(event) {
var key = window.event ? event.keyCode : event.which;
if (event.keyCode === 8 || event.keyCode === 46) {
return true;
} else if ( key < 48 || key > 57 ) {
return false;
} else {
return true;
}
};
Also attach to keypress event
$(document).ready(function(){
$('[id^=edit]').keypress(validateNumber);
});
And HTML:
<input type="input" id="edit1" value="0" size="5" maxlength="5" />
Here is a jsFiddle example
HTML5 supports regexes, so you could use this:
<input id="numbersOnly" pattern="[0-9.]+" type="text">
Warning: Some browsers don't support this yet.
I opted to use a combination of the two answers mentioned here i.e.
<input type="number" />
and
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode
return !(charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57));
}
<input type="text" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event);">
JavaScript
function validateNumber(evt) {
var e = evt || window.event;
var key = e.keyCode || e.which;
if (!e.shiftKey && !e.altKey && !e.ctrlKey &&
// numbers
key >= 48 && key <= 57 ||
// Numeric keypad
key >= 96 && key <= 105 ||
// Backspace and Tab and Enter
key == 8 || key == 9 || key == 13 ||
// Home and End
key == 35 || key == 36 ||
// left and right arrows
key == 37 || key == 39 ||
// Del and Ins
key == 46 || key == 45) {
// input is VALID
}
else {
// input is INVALID
e.returnValue = false;
if (e.preventDefault) e.preventDefault();
}
}
additional you could add comma, period and minus (,.-)
// comma, period and minus, . on keypad
key == 190 || key == 188 || key == 109 || key == 110 ||
HTML
<input type="text" onkeydown="validateNumber(event);"/ >
2 solutions:
Use a form validator (for example with jQuery validation plugin)
Do a check during the onblur (i.e. when the user leaves the field) event of the input field, with the regular expression:
<script type="text/javascript">
function testField(field) {
var regExpr = new RegExp("^\d*\.?\d*$");
if (!regExpr.test(field.value)) {
// Case of error
field.value = "";
}
}
</script>
<input type="text" ... onblur="testField(this);"/>
// In a JavaScript function (can use HTML or PHP).
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode;
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
In your form input:
<input type=text name=form_number size=20 maxlength=12 onkeypress='return isNumberKey(event)'>
With input max. (These above allows for a 12-digit number)
You can use pattern for this:
<input id="numbers" pattern="[0-9.]+" type="number">
Here you can see the complete mobile website interface tips.
A safer approach is checking the value of the input, instead of hijacking keypresses and trying to filter keyCodes.
This way the user is free to use keyboard arrows, modifier keys, backspace, delete, use non standard keyboars, use mouse to paste, use drag and drop text, even use accessibility inputs.
The below script allows positive and negative numbers
1
10
100.0
100.01
-1
-1.0
-10.00
1.0.0 //not allowed
var input = document.getElementById('number');
input.onkeyup = input.onchange = enforceFloat;
//enforce that only a float can be inputed
function enforceFloat() {
var valid = /^\-?\d+\.\d*$|^\-?[\d]*$/;
var number = /\-\d+\.\d*|\-[\d]*|[\d]+\.[\d]*|[\d]+/;
if (!valid.test(this.value)) {
var n = this.value.match(number);
this.value = n ? n[0] : '';
}
}
<input id="number" value="-3.1415" placeholder="Type a number" autofocus>
EDIT: I removed my old answer because I think it is antiquated now.
One more example where you can add only numbers in the input field, can not letters
<input type="text" class="form-control" id="phone" name="phone" placeholder="PHONE" spellcheck="false" oninput="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9.]/g, '').replace(/(\..*)\./g, '$1');">
Please find below mentioned solution. In this user can be able to enter only numeric value, Also user can not be able to copy, paste, drag and drop in input.
Allowed Characters
0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9
Not allowed Characters and Characters through events
Alphabetic value
Special characters
Copy
Paste
Drag
Drop
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#number').bind("cut copy paste drag drop", function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
});
});
function isNumberKey(evt) {
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode;
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
<link href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.3.7/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet"/>
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" class="form-control" name="number" id="number" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event)" placeholder="Enter Numeric value only">
Let me know if it not works.
If you want to suggest to the device (maybe a mobile phone) between alpha or numeric you can use <input type="number">.
A short and sweet implementation using jQuery and replace() instead of looking at event.keyCode or event.which:
$('input.numeric').live('keyup', function(e) {
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^0-9]/g, ''));
});
Only small side effect that the typed letter appears momentarily and CTRL/CMD + A seems to behave a bit strange.
JavaScript code:
function validate(evt)
{
if(evt.keyCode!=8)
{
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
key = String.fromCharCode(key);
var regex = /[0-9]|\./;
if (!regex.test(key))
{
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if (theEvent.preventDefault)
theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
}
HTML code:
<input type='text' name='price' value='0' onkeypress='validate(event)'/>
works perfectly because the backspace keycode is 8 and a regex expression doesn't let it, so it's an easy way to bypass the bug :)
just use type="number" now this attribute supporting in most of the browsers
<input type="number" maxlength="3" ng-bind="first">
A easy way to resolve this problem is implementing a jQuery function to validate with regex the charaters typed in the textbox for example:
Your html code:
<input class="integerInput" type="text">
And the js function using jQuery
$(function() {
$('.integerInput').on('input', function() {
this.value = this.value
.replace(/[^\d]/g, '');// numbers and decimals only
});
});
$(function() {
$('.integerInput').on('input', function() {
this.value = this.value
.replace(/[^\d]/g, '');// numbers and decimals only
});
});
<script
src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.2.4.min.js"
integrity="sha256-BbhdlvQf/xTY9gja0Dq3HiwQF8LaCRTXxZKRutelT44="
crossorigin="anonymous">
</script>
<input type="text" class="integerInput"/>
input type="number" is an HTML5 attribute.
In the other case this will help you:
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
<input type="number" name="somecode" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event)"/>
Just an other variant with jQuery using
$(".numeric").keypress(function() {
return (/\d/.test(String.fromCharCode(event.which) ))
});
I saw some great answers however I like them as small and as simple as possible, so maybe someone will benefit from it. I would use javascript Number() and isNaN functionality like this:
if(isNaN(Number(str))) {
// ... Exception it is NOT a number
} else {
// ... Do something you have a number
}
Hope this helps.
You can also compare input value (which is treated as string by default) to itself forced as numeric, like:
if(event.target.value == event.target.value * 1) {
// returns true if input value is numeric string
}
However, you need to bind that to event like keyup etc.
<input name="amount" type="text" value="Only number in here"/>
<script>
$('input[name=amount]').keyup(function(){
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^\d]/,''));
});
</script>
My solution for a better user experience:
HTML
<input type="tel">
jQuery
$('[type=tel]').on('change', function(e) {
$(e.target).val($(e.target).val().replace(/[^\d\.]/g, ''))
})
$('[type=tel]').on('keypress', function(e) {
keys = ['0','1','2','3','4','5','6','7','8','9','.']
return keys.indexOf(event.key) > -1
})
Details:
First of all, input types:
number shows up/down arrows shrinking the actual input space, I find them ugly and are only useful if the number represents a quantity (things like phones, area codes, IDs... don't need them)
tel provides similar browser validations of number without arrows
Using [number / tel] also helps showing numeric keyboard on mobile devices.
For the JS validation I ended up needing 2 functions, one for the normal user input (keypress) and the other for a copy+paste fix (change), other combinations would give me a terrible user experience.
I use the more reliable KeyboardEvent.key instead of the now deprecated KeyboardEvent.charCode
And depending of your browser support you can consider using Array.prototype.includes() instead of the poorly named Array.prototype.indexOf() (for true / false results)
Use this DOM:
<input type = "text" onkeydown = "validate(event)"/>
And this script:
validate = function(evt)
{
if ([8, 46, 37, 39, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 35, 36].indexOf(evt.keyCode || evt.which) == -1)
{
evt.returnValue = false;
if(evt.preventDefault){evt.preventDefault();}
}
}
...OR this script, without indexOf, using two for's...
validate = function(evt)
{
var CharValidate = new Array("08", "046", "039", "948", "235");
var number_pressed = false;
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++)
{
for (Ncount = 0; Ncount < parseInt(CharValidate[i].substring(0, 1)) + 1; Ncount++)
{
if ((evt.keyCode || evt.which) == parseInt(CharValidate[i].substring(1, CharValidate[i].lenght)) + Ncount)
{
number_pressed = true;
}
}
}
if (number_pressed == false)
{
evt.returnValue = false;
if(evt.preventDefault){evt.preventDefault();}
}
}
I used the onkeydown attribute instead of onkeypress, because the onkeydown attribute is checked before onkeypress attribute. The problem would be in the Google Chrome browser.
With the attribute "onkeypress", TAB would be uncontrollable with "preventDefault" on google chrome, however, with the attribute "onkeydown", TAB becomes controllable!
ASCII Code for TAB => 9
The first script have less code than the second, however, the array of ASCII characters must have all the keys.
The second script is much bigger than the first, but the array does not need all keys. The first digit in each position of the array is the number of times each position will be read. For each reading, will be incremented 1 to the next one. For example:
NCount = 0
48 + NCount = 48
NCount + +
48 + NCount = 49
NCount + +
...
48 + NCount = 57
In the case of numerical keys are only 10 (0 - 9), but if they were 1 million it would not make sense to create an array with all these keys.
ASCII codes:
8 ==> (Backspace);
46 => (Delete);
37 => (left arrow);
39 => (right arrow);
48 - 57 => (numbers);
36 => (home);
35 => (end);
This is an improved function:
function validateNumber(evt) {
var theEvent = evt || window.event;
var key = theEvent.keyCode || theEvent.which;
if ((key < 48 || key > 57) && !(key == 8 || key == 9 || key == 13 || key == 37 || key == 39 || key == 46) ){
theEvent.returnValue = false;
if (theEvent.preventDefault) theEvent.preventDefault();
}
}
Here is my simple solution for React users only, I couldn't find a better solution and made my own. 3 steps.
First, create a state.
const [tagInputVal, setTagInputVal] = useState("");
Then, use the state as input value (value={tagInputVal}) and pass the event to the onChange handler.
<input id="tag-input" type="text" placeholder="Add a tag" value={tagInputVal} onChange={(e) => onChangeTagInput(e)}></input>
Then, set the value of the event inside onChange handler.
function onChangeTagInput(e) {
setTagInputVal(e.target.value.replace(/[^\d.]/ig, ""));
}