DOM event for browser password autofill? - javascript

I've got a fairly standard username/password entry box on a web site I'm building. The password box has a div containing "Password" overlaid on top of it, which is set to display: none; on focus or click.
This works great until the user asks their browser to remember the password: in that case you can end up with the situation in the attached screen shot.
My question then is: is there an event that I can bind to that will trigger when the password field autofills so I can hide the help div?

Here's the crappy solution I came up:
I added an interval timer to the site that checks the value of the box, and hides the help text when the value is not an empty string.

Why don't you verify if the password textbox is filled on the document.ready event and on each usernametextfield.onchange event? That way you don't need a timer and it should be right.
Note: It could be (I haven't tested this) that the onchange event will be triggered before the browser has filled in the password field. To handle that short timespan, you could launch the check a few 100 milliseconds later using setTimeOut.

I used the blur event on the username to check if the pwd field had been auto-filled.
$('#userNameTextBox').blur(function () {
if ($('#userNameTextBox').val() == "") {
$('#userNameTextBox').val("User Name");
}
if ($('#passwordTextBox').val() != "") {
$('#passwordTextBoxClear').hide(); // textbox with "Password" text in it
$('#passwordTextBox').show();
}
});
This works for IE, and should work for all other browsers (I've only checked IE)

maybe my solution with jquery will catch your attention :).
here is what i did for solution:
$('form input').bind('change', function(){
$('form').find('input').each(function(){
label = $(this).prev('label');
if($(this).val()!==''){
label.addClass('active');
}
});
});
first of all i bind change event with input field so when one of the input fields get changed i do the next step which is testing all input fields and any of them has changed value i make then what i want with it
for more clarification => JSFIDDLE

For chrome :-webkit-autofill class works perfectly.
For a browser independent solution I what found was, the mouseleave event is fired whenever mouse is hovered over the browser's autofill dropdown. You can write handler on the input or its parent elements or event window. see the code below.
In HTML:
<div id="banner-message">
<div>
<input type="text" id="name" name="name" placeholder="name"/>
</div>
<div>
<input type="text" id="email" name="email" placeholder="email"/>
</div>
<div>
<input type="password" name="password" placeholder="password"/>
</div>
</div>
<div id="event-log"> </div>
In jQuery:
var banner = $("#banner-message")
var eventlog = $("#event-log");
var inputs = $("input");
//Following event fired when hovered over autofill dropdown,
banner.on("mouseleave", function(event) {
var targetid = event.target.id;
eventlog.html('Source id::'+targetid);
});
In the above code when the event is fired, event.target is the element from which the pointer is left and entered into dropdown.
one thing to note here is, you have to identify the correct way to detect mouseleave which is fired only when autofilled.The above solution worked for me.
see this fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/nilesh_ramteke/nt7a1ruw/20/
Please configure your browser for autofill before trying above solution.

Related

Submitting Form on Enter Press

I know that this question has been asked before but I'm having particular trouble submitting my form when I press the enter key. I've tried multiple solutions but none have worked. When I try to press enter, the page refreshes and my typing is gone.
This is my HTML:
form class="nput">
<h1 class= "header">Member Login</h1>
<label class="text" for="pswd">Enter your password: </label>
<input class="form" type="password" id="pswd">
<input id="yeet" class="bttn" type="button" value="Submit" onclick="checkPswd();" />
</form>
And this is my Javascript:
<script type="text/javascript">
function checkPswd() {
var confirmPassword = "password";
var password = document.getElementById("pswd").value;
if (password == confirmPassword) {
window.location="members.html";
}
else{
alert("Password incorrect. Please try again.");
}
}
// Get the input field
var input = document.getElementById("pswd");
input.addEventListener("keyup", function(event) {
if (event.keyCode === 13) {
alert("hi there");
event.preventDefault();
document.getElementById("yeet").click();
}
});
</script>
I cannot figure out this small issue and I would appreciate any help! Thanks!
EDIT: I just wanted to let everyone know that I do in fact know that there is little security that comes with this method but I mostly want the password for looks not function.
You got something backwards there - you are submitting the form with Enter. This is exactly the problem though, it seems as if you don't want to submit it, instead you want to run your client-side handler checkPswd. (You do know that everyone can read the correct password in their browser console though, right? So it's no protection.)
What you want to do is change the onclick on the button to an onsubmit on the form itself! Then your code will run no matter in what way (keyboard or mouse) the form is submitted.
You can delete the whole keyup stuff then.
(The reason your attempt to "click" the button in JavaScript wasn't working is because unlike jQuery's click method, the vanilla click will only execute the default action and not any attached click event handlers like yours. Also, it is kinda backwards because you should react on the common ground of both clicking the button and pressing Enter, which is submitting the form.)
To echo a comment above - you want to use the onsubmit handler on the <form> element - this will allow users to submit the form both by clicking the <button type="submit> button, and by hitting the enter key in one of the forms <input> elements.
You can probably ditch the input.addEventListener("keyup", function(event) {...} altogether by just using the obsubmit handler.
You can learn more about the HTML <form> element's onsubmit behavior here:
https://www.w3schools.com/tags/ev_onsubmit.asp
No need to put handlers on button element. You should use either input type as submit or button type as submit. onsubmit handler can be given to form element where you can actually prevent default event and go ahead with password validation .
Hope this gives you an idea.
If I were you, I would do two things:
1) I would check the Chrome debugger to see if there are any issues with your code
2) Instead of input.addEventListener("keyup", function(event) {, I would try input.onkeyup = function(event) { and see if that works.
Hope this helps.

onchange not firing when date of input type="date" is clear as first action

I have a type="date" input that onchange fires some JS. My problem is that if you want to clear the date with the "cross button" on the right of the input tag, it will not fire the onchange event, unless you have previously changed the value. It seems really weird to me. My question: can I fire JS when my first action is clicking the "cross button" that delete the date?
I'm using Firefox 58.0.1
Edit: Now if working as expected (sept 2020, Firefox 80.0.1)
function myFunction(IdTag) {
var x = document.getElementById(IdTag).value;
alert('The new value is: '+x);
}
<input type="date" id="MyID" value="2018-02-06" onchange="myFunction('MyID');">
Worked for me.
I created an html file with this content:
<html>
<head></head>
<body>
<input type="date" id="MyID" value="2018-02-06" onchange="myFunction('MyID');">
<script>
function myFunction(IdTag) {
var x = document.getElementById(IdTag).value;
alert('The new value is: '+x);
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
And the event fired and also cleared the date (which was set to MM/DD/YYYY).
Make sure you're not seeing any errors in the Developer Tools.
I had this same issue as well (FF 64.0.1 on Linux) and I solved it by utilising the 'mousedown' event.
Essentially when the mousedown event triggers set up a timer that will manually trigger the onchange on your date input after a certain time, I found 500ms was sufficient for my use case.
I am using jQuery and got it to work, the process should be fairly similar for native JS:
$('input[name="start_date"]').on('mousedown',function() {
var $this = $(this);
setTimeout(function(){ $($this).trigger('change'); }, 500);
});
I had the same problem, and after some research i figured out that there is already a unconfirmed bug Report at Mozilla Bugtracker.
I am using jQuery and my solution was to call focus and blur after binding the even
$('#datefield').on('change', someFunction).focus().blur();
because the bug only appears if someone clicks on the reset button before giving the input the focus. By set and remove the focus to the input, the user does not recognize anything and the bug is bypassed.

How to set search input focused when user typed something using JavaScript?

I created an application to list all products, and user can search for products using different ways, one of them is scanning barcode, usually, user should focus on the search input and scan the barcode, this is working fine.
But when the input (search input) is not focused, I want to make it default so that when user typed something, or scanned barcode, this input get focused before keydown or keypress.
Is that possible? for example if we can get an event before (keydown) or (keypress) then we can focus on the input so easy.
(Same idea if user pasted a text from clip board using control+v the the default search input focused and pasted to it).
You don't need an event before keydown, you can just use keydown:
$(document).bind('keydown',function(e){
$('input').focus();
});
See this jsfiddle example
Yes, it is possible if you add an event listener to the window object.
Example:
jQuery(document).ready(function() {
jQuery(window).keydown(function(ev) {
if (ev.target.tagName === 'INPUT' || ev.target.tagName === 'TEXTAREA')
return;
jQuery('#mydefaulttextbox').focus()
});
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
This is my default input:
<input id="mydefaulttextbox" type="text" />
<p>
This is another input:
<input type="text" />
</p>
The keydown binding is used because the character are only impressed when the keyup or keypress event is received.
You also don't need jQuery for this.
<input type='text' id='bar_code_input' name='bar_code_input' />
<script type='text/javascript'>
document.addEventListener('keypress', function(){
var bc_input = document.getElementById('bar_code_input');
bc_input.focus();
});
</script>
https://jsfiddle.net/5d51z8rr/

Changing value of input box with Javascript defeats following call to focus method

I have a web page that uses jQuery that has several input boxes. The input boxes are set to auto-select the existing text (value property) when the click() event fires. It was working great until I tried to pre-fill one of the input boxes from within the document ready() event. If I do that, then despite calling the focus() method on the desired field, that field does not receive focus (cursor is not in the input box and the text is not auto-selected). If I click on the field then the text does auto-select so that part still works, just not setting the focus.
I have included the Javascript code for the entire document ready event in case it's a bad synergy between the elements on the page. Note the getSearchArguments() call simply takes the URL arguments and turns them into an associative array. Here's the HTML for the E-mail address field I am trying to auto-focus/select:
<!-- E-mail Address -->
<div NAME="divEmailAddress" ID="divEmailAddress">
<img NAME="imgEvernoteEmailAddress" ID="imgEvernoteEmailAddress" src="/images/evernote-mail-address.png" align="left" />
<input type="text" NAME="emailAddress" ID="emailAddress" wrap="soft" style="margin-left:5px;width:600px;" title="Enter your Evernote E-mail address here" value="Enter your E-mail address" ></input>
</div>
Can anyone tell me how to fix this so that the focus() method still works after pre-filling an input box?
UPDATE: It turns out adding a new explicit call to select() after the focus() call solved the problem. If someone could tell me why this is I'd appreciate it.
$(document).ready
(
function()
{
// Put jQuery related initialization code that must occur after the document is ready here.
// Have all the edit boxes except the Tags edit box auto-select the current text upon entry.
$("#editEvernoteTags").autoSuggest
(
data.items,
{
selectedItemProp: "name",
searchObjProps: "name",
startText: "Enter Evernote tags here...",
/* See autoSuggest.css
open: function(event, ui)
{
$(this).autoSuggest("widget").css
(
{
"width": 200
}
);
}
*/
} // data. items
); // $("input[type=text]").autoSuggest
$("#emailAddress").onblur = checkEmailAddress;
// $("#emailAddress").css('width', $("#editEvernoteTags").css('width') * 2);
// Synchronize the control widths to the autoSuggest "as-selections" class element.
var tagsWidth = $("ul.as-selections").width();
$("#emailAddress").width(tagsWidth);
$("#editComment").width(tagsWidth);
// If an E-mail address was provided as a URL argument, put it in the E-mail address field.
var urlEmailAddress = getSearchArguments().emailAddress;
// >>> COMMENTING OUT THIS IF/ELSE BLOCK ALLOWS THE FOCUS() METHOD TO WORK.
// value="Enter your E-mail address"
if (urlEmailAddress)
$("#emailAddress").val(urlEmailAddress);
else
$("#emailAddress").val("Enter your E-mail address");
// E-mail address
$('#emailAddress').click(function()
{
$(this).select();
});
// Comment
$('#editComment').click(function()
{
$(this).select();
});
// Set focus to the E-mail field.
$("#emailAddress").focus();
// >>>> This is needed to initially select the text the first time
// if the pre-fill code above is used.
$("#emailAddress").select();
} // function()
); // $(document).ready
You did not set a focus handler. You've set a click handler. To trigger the event, use .click() and not .focus().
$("#emailAddress").click();

Selecting all text in HTML text input when clicked

I have the following code to display a textbox in a HTML webpage.
<input type="text" id="userid" name="userid" value="Please enter the user ID" />
When the page displays, the text contains the Please enter the user ID message. However, I found that the user needs to click 3 times in order to select all the text (in this case it is Please enter the user ID).
Is it possible to select the entire text with only one click?
Edit:
Sorry, I forgot to say: I must use the input type="text"
You can use the JavaScript .select() method for HTMLElement:
<label for="userid">User ID</label>
<input onClick="this.select();" value="Please enter the user ID" id="userid" />
But apparently it doesn't work on mobile Safari. In those cases you can use:
<input onClick="this.setSelectionRange(0, this.value.length)" value="Sample Text" id="userid" />
The previously posted solutions have two quirks:
In Chrome the selection via .select() doesn't stick - adding a slight timeout resolves this issue.
It's impossible to place the cursor at a desired point after focus.
Here's a complete solution that selects all text on focus, but allows selecting a specific cursor point after focus.
$(function () {
var focusedElement;
$(document).on('focus', 'input', function () {
if (focusedElement == this) return; //already focused, return so user can now place cursor at specific point in input.
focusedElement = this;
setTimeout(function () { focusedElement.select(); }, 100); //select all text in any field on focus for easy re-entry. Delay sightly to allow focus to "stick" before selecting.
});
});
Html (you'll have to put the onclick attribute on every input you want it to work for on the page)
<input type="text" value="click the input to select" onclick="this.select();"/>
OR A BETTER OPTION
jQuery (this will work for every text input on the page, no need to change your html):
<script type="text/javascript" src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7.1/jquery.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function(){
$(document).on('click','input[type=text]',function(){ this.select(); });
});
</script>
You should not use this approach to provide examples for input values (any more).
The best option is to now use the placeholder HTML attribute if possible:
<label for="userid">User ID</label>
<input type="text" id="userid" name="userid" placeholder="Please enter the user ID" />
This will cause the text to show unless a value is entered, eliminating the need to select text or clear inputs.
Beware that placeholders are no replacement for labels, as they disappear once text is entered, and pose issues for accessibility.
You can always use document.execCommand (supported in all major browsers)
document.execCommand("selectall", null, false);
Selects all text in the currently focused element.
Update 2021: execCommand is now deprecated.
It's probably for the best to be honest, as it was an old IE API which had been adopted by the other browsers, and it was always a little weird to work with. Nevertheless, it was nice to have one solution which worked both with <input> fields and contenteditable elements.
.select() is probably the best way to go for <input> fields these days.
For contenteditable, the modern solution there is to use the range API.
Note: When you consider onclick="this.select()", At the first click, All characters will be selected, After that maybe you wanted to edit something in input and click among characters again but it will select all characters again. To fix this problem you should use onfocus instead of onclick.
Try:
onclick="this.select()"
It works great for me.
The answers listed are partial according to me. I have linked below two examples of how to do this in Angular and with JQuery.
This solution has the following features:
Works for all browsers that support JQuery, Safari, Chrome, IE, Firefox, etc.
Works for Phonegap/Cordova: Android and IOs.
Only selects all once after input gets focus until next blur and then focus
Multiple inputs can be used and it does not glitch out.
Angular directive has great re-usage simply add directive select-all-on-click
JQuery can be modified easily
JQuery:
http://plnkr.co/edit/VZ0o2FJQHTmOMfSPRqpH?p=preview
$("input").blur(function() {
if ($(this).attr("data-selected-all")) {
//Remove atribute to allow select all again on focus
$(this).removeAttr("data-selected-all");
}
});
$("input").click(function() {
if (!$(this).attr("data-selected-all")) {
try {
$(this).selectionStart = 0;
$(this).selectionEnd = $(this).value.length + 1;
//add atribute allowing normal selecting post focus
$(this).attr("data-selected-all", true);
} catch (err) {
$(this).select();
//add atribute allowing normal selecting post focus
$(this).attr("data-selected-all", true);
}
}
});
Angular:
http://plnkr.co/edit/llcyAf?p=preview
var app = angular.module('app', []);
//add select-all-on-click to any input to use directive
app.directive('selectAllOnClick', [function() {
return {
restrict: 'A',
link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
var hasSelectedAll = false;
element.on('click', function($event) {
if (!hasSelectedAll) {
try {
//iOS, Safari, thows exception on Chrome etc
this.selectionStart = 0;
this.selectionEnd = this.value.length + 1;
hasSelectedAll = true;
} catch (err) {
//Non iOS option if not supported, e.g. Chrome
this.select();
hasSelectedAll = true;
}
}
});
//On blur reset hasSelectedAll to allow full select
element.on('blur', function($event) {
hasSelectedAll = false;
});
}
};
}]);
input autofocus, with onfocus event:
<INPUT onfocus="this.select()" TYPE="TEXT" NAME="thing" autofocus>
This lets you open a form with the desired element selected. It works by using autofocus to hit the input, which then sends itself an onfocus event, which in turn selects the text.
I was looking for a CSS-only solution and found this works for iOS browsers (tested safari and chrome).
It does not have the same behavior on desktop chrome, but the pain of selecting is not as great there because you have a lot more options as a user (double-click, ctrl-a, etc):
.select-all-on-touch {
-webkit-user-select: all;
user-select: all;
}
Indeed, use onclick="this.select();" but remember not to combine it with disabled="disabled" - it will not work then and you will need to manually select or multi-click to select, still. If you wish to lock the content value to be selected, combine with the attribute readonly.
You can replace
<input type="text" id="userid" name="userid" value="Please enter the user ID" />
With:
<input type="text" id="userid" name="userid" placeholder="Please enter the user ID" />
The placeholder is used to replace value as how you wanted people to be able to Type in the text box without having to click multiple times or using ctrl + a. Placeholder makes it so it isn't a value but as the name suggests a place holder. That is what is used in multiple online forms that says "Username here" or "Email" and when you click on it the "Email" disappears and you can start typing right away.
Here's a reusable version of Shoban's answer:
<input type="text" id="userid" name="userid"
value="Please enter the user ID" onfocus="Clear(this);"
/>
function Clear(elem)
{
elem.value='';
}
That way you can reuse the clear script for multiple elements.
Here's an example in React, but it can be translated to jQuery on vanilla JS if you prefer:
class Num extends React.Component {
click = ev => {
const el = ev.currentTarget;
if(document.activeElement !== el) {
setTimeout(() => {
el.select();
}, 0);
}
}
render() {
return <input type="number" min={0} step={15} onMouseDown={this.click} {...this.props} />
}
}
The trick here is to use onMouseDown because the element has already received focus by the time the "click" event fires (and thus the activeElement check will fail).
The activeElement check is necessary so that they user can position their cursor where they want without constantly re-selecting the entire input.
The timeout is necessary because otherwise the text will be selected and then instantly unselected, as I guess the browser does the cursor-positioning check afterwords.
And lastly, the el = ev.currentTarget is necessary in React because React re-uses event objects and you'll lose the synthetic event by the time the setTimeout fires.
I think its better to control via event. This variant looks pretty intuitively and work with ts as well:
onFocus={e => {
e.target.select();
}
If you need selectAll every click then you can use this:
onClick={e => {
e.target.focus();
e.target.select();
}
The exact solution to what you asked is :
<input type="text" id="userid" name="userid" value="Please enter the user ID" onClick="this.setSelectionRange(0, this.value.length)"/>
But I suppose,you are trying to show "Please enter the user ID" as a placeholder or hint in the input.
So,you can use the following as a more efficient solution:
<input type="text" id="userid" name="userid" placeholder="Please enter the user ID" />
The problem with catching the click event is that each subsequent click within the text will select it again, whereas the user was probably expecting to reposition the cursor.
What worked for me was declaring a variable, selectSearchTextOnClick, and setting it to true by default. The click handler checks that the variable's still true: if it is, it sets it to false and performs the select(). I then have a blur event handler which sets it back to true.
Results so far seem like the behavior I'd expect.
(Edit: I neglected to say that I'd tried catching the focus event as someone suggested,but that doesn't work: after the focus event fires, the click event can fire, immediately deselecting the text).
This question has options for when .select() is not working on mobile platforms: Programmatically selecting text in an input field on iOS devices (mobile Safari)
Html like this
<input type="text" value="click the input to select" onclick="javascript:textSelector(this)"/>
and javascript code without bind
function textSelector(ele){
$(ele).select();
}
Well this is normal activity for a TextBox.
Click 1 - Set focus
Click 2/3 (double click) - Select text
You could set focus on the TextBox when the page first loads to reduce the "select" to a single double-click event.
Use "placeholder" instead of "value" in your input field.
Use this:
var textInput = document.querySelector("input");
textInput.onclick = function() {
textInput.selectionStart = 0;
textInput.selectionEnd = textInput.value.length;
}
<input type="text">
I'm using the focus-attribute in my vue application
<input #focus="$event.target.select()" />
If you are using AngularJS, you can use a custom directive for easy access:
define(['angular'], function () {
angular.module("selectionHelper", [])
.directive('selectOnClick', function () {
return {
restrict: 'A',
link: function (scope, element, attrs) {
element.on('click', function () {
this.select();
});
}
};
});
});
Now one can just use it like this:
<input type="text" select-on-click ... />
The sample is with requirejs - so the first and the last line can be skipped if using something else.
If anyone want to do this on page load w/ jQuery (sweet for search fields) here is my solution
jQuery.fn.focusAndSelect = function() {
return this.each(function() {
$(this).focus();
if (this.setSelectionRange) {
var len = $(this).val().length * 2;
this.setSelectionRange(0, len);
} else {
$(this).val($(this).val());
}
this.scrollTop = 999999;
});
};
(function ($) {
$('#input').focusAndSelect();
})(jQuery);
Based on this post . Thanks to CSS-Tricks.com
If you are just trying to have placeholder text that gets replaced when a user selects the element then it is obviously best practice to use placeholder attribute nowadays. However, if you want to select all of the current value when a field gains focus then a combination of #Cory House and #Toastrackenigma answers seems to be most canonical. Use focus and focusout events, with handlers that set/release the current focus element, and select all when focused. An angular2/typescript example is as follows (but would be trivial to convert to vanilla js):
Template:
<input type="text" (focus)="focus()" (focusout)="focusout()" ... >
Component:
private focused = false;
public focusout = (): void => {
this.focused = false;
};
public focus = (): void => {
if(this.focused) return;
this.focused = true;
// Timeout for cross browser compatibility (Chrome)
setTimeout(() => { document.execCommand('selectall', null, false); });
};
If you are looking for a pure vanilla javascript method, you can also use:
document.createRange().selectNodeContents( element );
This will select all the text and is supported by all major browsers.
To trigger the selection on focus, you just need to add the event listener like so:
document.querySelector( element ).addEventListener( 'focusin', function () {
document.createRange().selectNodeContents( this );
} );
If you want to place it inline in your HTML, then you can do this:
<input type="text" name="myElement" onFocus="document.createRange().selectNodeContents(this)'" value="Some text to select" />
This is just another option. There appears to be a few ways of doing this. (document.execCommand("selectall") as mentioned here as well)
document.querySelector('#myElement1').addEventListener('focusin', function() {
document.createRange().selectNodeContents(this);
});
<p>Cicking inside field will not trigger the selection, but tabbing into the fields will.</p>
<label for="">JS File Example<label><br>
<input id="myElement1" value="This is some text" /><br>
<br>
<label for="">Inline example</label><br>
<input id="myElement2" value="This also is some text" onfocus="document.createRange().selectNodeContents( this );" />
Using placeholder="Please enter the user ID" instead of value="Please enter the user ID" is the best approach for this scenario, but the function can be useful in some cases.
<input> elements can already listen to focus event. We can just add the event listener to it instead of document, and there is no further needs to listen to click.
Plain JavaScript:
document.getElementById("userid").addEventListener("focus", function() {
this.select();
});
With JQuery:
$("#userid").on("focus", function() {
this.select();
});
You may use this.setSelectionRange(0, this.value.length) instead of this.select() depends on your purpose but that will not work on some input types such as number.
Live demo
<input id="my_input" style="width: 400px; height: 30px;" value="some text to select">
<br>
<button id="select-bn" style="width: 100px; height: 30px; margin-top: 20px;cursor:pointer;">Select all</button>
<br><br>
OR
<br><br>
Click to copy
<br><br>
<input id="my_input_copy" style="width: 400px; height: 30px;" value="some text to select and copy">
<br>
<button id="select-bn-copy" style="width: 170px; height: 30px; margin-top: 20px;cursor:pointer;">Click copy text</button>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).on('click', '#select-bn', function() {
$("#my_input").select();
});
//click to select and copy to clipboard
var text_copy_bn = document.getElementById("select-bn-copy");
text_copy_bn.addEventListener('click', function(event) {
var copy_text = document.getElementById("my_input_copy");
copy_text.focus();
copy_text.select();
try {
var works = document.execCommand('copy');
var msg = works ? 'Text copied!' : 'Could not copy!';
alert(msg);
} catch (err) {
alert('Sorry, could not copy');
}
});
</script>

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