I wanna modify the document selection (user currently selected by mouse or keyboard), how to do it in a cross browser way?
I have not worked with text selection enough to provide real help, but what you are trying to do can be done. You will want to look into the following two functions:
createRange() MSDN | MDC
getRangeAt() MDC
I know it can be implemented cross browser. You can see some of it in action here:
http://fuelyourcoding.com/a-few-strategies-for-using-javascript/
By scrolling to the bottom and clicking the Elephant Icon, which uses the Evernote script. However, my script first selects the main content area (you will see it flash orange) and then it deselects once the capture is made.
Here is a mini jQuery plugin that does it. It was adapted by me from some site, and like the comments say, I feel horrible for not remembering. Its really important to note I adapted it to jQuery, but the code came from some site where they explained how to do it:
// Adapted this from somewhere. Feel horrible for not remembering.
$.fn.autoSelect = function(){
var selectTarget = this[0]; // Select first element from jQuery collection
if(selectTarget != null) {
if(selectTarget.tagName == 'TEXTAREA' || (selectTarget.tagName == "INPUT" && selectTarget.type == "text")) {
selectTarget.select();
} else if(window.getSelection) { // FF, Safari, Opera
var sel = window.getSelection();
var range = document.createRange();
range.selectNode(selectTarget);
sel.removeAllRanges();
sel.addRange(range);
} else { // IE
document.selection.empty();
var range = document.body.createTextRange();
range.moveToElementText(selectTarget);
range.select();
};
};
return this; // Don't break the chain
};
It seems this script is a few places online, but here is another variation on it
As an example, and the easiest one, let's say you want to move the user's selection to contain the contents of an element. The following will work in all major browsers:
function selectElementContents(el) {
var body = document.body, range, sel;
if (body.createTextRange) {
range = body.createTextRange();
range.moveToElementText(el);
range.select();
} else if (document.createRange && window.getSelection) {
range = document.createRange();
range.selectNodeContents(el);
sel = window.getSelection();
sel.removeAllRanges();
sel.addRange(range);
}
}
selectElementContents( document.getElementById("someElement") );
Related
I'm working on a blog where I want a section to add a post. I'm imagining it very similar to the StackExchange editor I'm using right now to write this post.
I've managed to work with the textarea to get things like current caret position, insert at position, etc.
The problem I'm running into now is not losing the highlighted text in the textarea when the user clicks on another element, ie: the bold tool.
By default (at least in Chrome) when you highlight text in a textarea and then click elsewhere on the page, the textarea loses focus and the highlighted text with it.
When the textarea loses focus it will by default lose any previous selection, so at the onblur event you can save the current selection using the following function:
function getSelectedText() {
var txtarea = document.getElementById(textBoxScript);
var start = txtarea.selectionStart;
var finish = txtarea.selectionEnd;
var sel = txtarea.value.substring(start, finish);
return sel;
}
And to set it back on focus event you can use the following function:
function selectText(startPos, endPos, tarea) {
// Chrome / Firefox
if (typeof (tarea.selectionStart) != "undefined") {
tarea.focus();
tarea.selectionStart = startPos;
tarea.selectionEnd = endPos;
return true;
}
// IE
if (document.selection && document.selection.createRange) {
tarea.focus();
tarea.select();
var range = document.selection.createRange();
range.collapse(true);
range.moveEnd("character", endPos);
range.moveStart("character", startPos);
range.select();
return true;
}
}
I know how to set an <a /> tag with the href attribute in a contenteditable like this:
execCommand("CreateLink", false, "#jumpmark");
which will result in
selection
However I cannot figure out how to set an anchor name instead of the href.
This is my desired result:
<a name="jumpmark">selection</a>
Can anyone help me?
Side notes: I am using jQuery and Rangy as libraries, however I would prefer a solution that works directly with execCommand.
Update: Here's a jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/fjYHr/ Select some text and click the button. All I want is that with the button click a link is inserted with a name attribute set instead of the href.
You could use something like the following, which is adapted from the pasteHtmlAtCaret() function from this answer of mine:
Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/F8Zny/
Code:
function surroundSelectedText(element) {
var sel, range;
if (window.getSelection) {
// IE9 and non-IE
sel = window.getSelection();
if (sel.getRangeAt && sel.rangeCount) {
range = sel.getRangeAt(0);
element.appendChild( document.createTextNode(range.toString()) );
range.deleteContents();
range.insertNode(element);
// Preserve the selection
range = range.cloneRange();
range.setStartAfter(element);
range.collapse(true);
sel.removeAllRanges();
sel.addRange(range);
}
} else if (document.selection && document.selection.type != "Control") {
// IE < 9
var selRange = document.selection.createRange();
element.appendChild( document.createTextNode(selRange.text) );
selRange.pasteHTML(element.outerHTML);
}
}
If you must use document.execCommand() then you could use the InsertHTML command in non-IE browsers. However, IE does not support it.
document.execCommand("InsertHTML", false, '<a name="jumpmark">selection</a>');
I see you're using Rangy, but I don't how to use it at all. Before I realized what Rangy was, I looked up how to get the current selection. I found a function that gets it and replaces it with a passed in value. I ended up modfiying it, but here it is:
http://jsfiddle.net/fjYHr/1/
$(document).ready(function () {
$("#setlink").click(function () {
replaceSelectedText("jumplink");
});
});
function replaceSelectedText(nameValue) {
var sel, sel2, range;
if (window.getSelection) {
sel = window.getSelection();
sel2 = ""+sel; // Copy selection value
if (sel.rangeCount) {
range = sel.getRangeAt(0);
range.deleteContents();
var newA = document.createElement("a");
newA.name = nameValue;
newA.innerHTML = sel2;
range.insertNode(newA);
}
} else if (document.selection && document.selection.createRange) {
// Not sure what to do here
range = document.selection.createRange();
var newA = "<a name='" + nameValue.replace(/'/g, "") + "'>" + range.text + "</a>";
range.text = newA;
}
}
Notice how I store the original current selection, then replace it with an <a> element that gets its name set with the passed-in value.
As for the document.selection part (which seems to be used by IE < 9), I'm not 100% sure that the code I provided will work (actually allow HTML in the selection, and not escaping it). But it's my attempt :)
As you've seen execCommand is rather limited in the attributes you can set, as such you cannot set the name attribute using it - only the href.
As you have jQuery set as a tag, you can use that as an alternative:
var $a = $('<a></a>').attr('name', 'jumpmark').appendTo('body');
Update
I need to work on the current selection. Specifically I don't have a jQuery object that I can append to, meaning I don't have a DOM node that I can work on
In this case use a plugin such as Rangy to get the selection which you can then amend with jQuery as required.
Here is my question:
When the user makes a selection in an article or in the editing area of a WYSWYG editor widget,
the selection can span over multiple elements,
like anchors, images, span tags... even block-level elements (but no table in my problem).
I know how to retrieve a Range object from the selection,
but could not find a reliable solution to get the content text of the Range object.
I'm not looking for a solution for IE (its TextRange object has a .text property).
Thanks!
Have you looked at the quirksmode article on Range?
Based on this article, you could create a method like this:
function getRangeText() {
var userSelection;
if (window.getSelection) {
userSelection = window.getSelection();
} else if (document.selection) {
userSelection = document.selection.createRange();
}
var selectedText = userSelection;
if (userSelection.text) {
selectedText = userSelection.text;
}
return selectedText;
}
I tested this in FF5, Opera 11, Safari on the Mac, as well as IE6 and IE7. It's worth testing in the other IE browsers, but my guess is it works in them, as well.
This returns a string and works in all major browsers:
function getSelectionText() {
var text = ""
if (window.getSelection) {
text = window.getSelection().toString();
} else if (document.selection && document.selection.type == "Text") {
text = document.selection.createRange().text;
}
return text;
}
In JavaScript, there is a method window.getSelection(), that lets me get the current selection that the user has made.
Is there a corresponding function, something like window.setSelection(), that will let me set, or clear, the current selection?
Clearing the selection in all major browsers:
function clearSelection() {
if (window.getSelection) {
window.getSelection().removeAllRanges();
} else if (document.selection) {
document.selection.empty();
}
}
Selecting content requires use of DOM Range and Selection objects in most browsers and TextRange objects in IE < 9. Here's a simple cross-browser example that selects the contents of a particular element:
function selectElement(element) {
if (window.getSelection) {
var sel = window.getSelection();
sel.removeAllRanges();
var range = document.createRange();
range.selectNodeContents(element);
sel.addRange(range);
} else if (document.selection) {
var textRange = document.body.createTextRange();
textRange.moveToElementText(element);
textRange.select();
}
}
Maybe this will do it:
window.selection.clear();
Crossbrowser version:
if (window.getSelection) {
if (window.getSelection().empty) { // Chrome
window.getSelection().empty();
} else if (window.getSelection().removeAllRanges) { // Firefox
window.getSelection().removeAllRanges();
}
} else if (document.selection) { // IE?
document.selection.empty();
}
NOTE: This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
Clear Selection:
// get a Selection object representing the range of text selected by the user or the current position of the caret.
var selection = window.getSelection();
selection.removeAllRanges();
Set Selection By Node:
var selection = window.getSelection();
var range = document.createRange();
range.selectNode(nodeToSelect);
selection.addRange(range);
Set Selection By Indexes:
var selection = window.getSelection();
var range = document.createRange();
range.setStart(nodeToSelect, this.startIndex);
range.setEnd(nodeToSelect, this.endIndex);
selection.addRange(range);
Get Current Selection
var range = window.getSelection().getRangeAt(0);
In browsers that support the "selection" and "range" stuff, you'll want to create a range object and then set its start/end. The Mozilla documentation for the "range" object has a lot of information.
Chrome doesn't support this, at least not with that API, and I bet Safari doesn't either.
edit — thanks to #Tim Down for noting that WebKit (Chrome & Safari) do indeed support this, which means my jsfiddle had a typo or something!
I'm trying to make a JavaScript bookmarklet that will act as a highlighter, changing the background of selected text on a webpage to yellow when the bookmarklet is pressed.
I'm using the following code to get the selected text, and it works fine, returning the correct string
function getSelText() {
var SelText = '';
if (window.getSelection) {
SelText = window.getSelection();
} else if (document.getSelection) {
SelText = document.getSelection();
} else if (document.selection) {
SelText = document.selection.createRange().text;
}
return SelText;
}
However, when I created a similar function to change the CSS of the selected text using jQuery, it isn't working:
function highlightSelText() {
var SelText;
if (window.getSelection) {
SelText = window.getSelection();
} else if (document.getSelection) {
SelText = document.getSelection();
} else if (document.selection) {
SelText = document.selection.createRange().text;
}
$(SelText).css({'background-color' : 'yellow', 'font-weight' : 'bolder'});
}
Any ideas?
The easiest way to do this is to use execCommand(), which has a command to change the background colour in all modern browsers.
The following should do what you want on any selection, including ones spanning multiple elements. In non-IE browsers it turns on designMode, applies a background colour and then switches designMode off again.
UPDATE
Fixed in IE 9.
function makeEditableAndHighlight(colour) {
var range, sel = window.getSelection();
if (sel.rangeCount && sel.getRangeAt) {
range = sel.getRangeAt(0);
}
document.designMode = "on";
if (range) {
sel.removeAllRanges();
sel.addRange(range);
}
// Use HiliteColor since some browsers apply BackColor to the whole block
if (!document.execCommand("HiliteColor", false, colour)) {
document.execCommand("BackColor", false, colour);
}
document.designMode = "off";
}
function highlight(colour) {
var range, sel;
if (window.getSelection) {
// IE9 and non-IE
try {
if (!document.execCommand("BackColor", false, colour)) {
makeEditableAndHighlight(colour);
}
} catch (ex) {
makeEditableAndHighlight(colour)
}
} else if (document.selection && document.selection.createRange) {
// IE <= 8 case
range = document.selection.createRange();
range.execCommand("BackColor", false, colour);
}
}
Here is a crude example of how it could work. As Zack points out you'll need to be aware of cases where the selection spans multiple elements. This isn't intended to be used as-is, just something to help get ideas flowing. Tested in Chrome.
var selection = window.getSelection();
var text = selection.toString();
var parent = $(selection.focusNode.parentElement);
var oldHtml = parent.html();
var newHtml = oldHtml.replace(text, "<span class='highlight'>"+text+"</span>");
parent.html( newHtml );
To make the highlight stick permanently, I believe you are going to have to wrap the selection in a new DOM element (span should do), to which you can then attach style properties. I don't know if jQuery can do that for you. Keep in mind that selections can span element boundaries, so in the general case you're going to have to inject a whole bunch of new elements
Have a look at a little example i made at http://www.jsfiddle.net/hbwEE/3/
It does not take into account selections that span multiple elements..
(IE will do but will mess the html a bit ..)
In Firefox, you can use the ::-moz-selection psuedo-class.
In Webkit, you can use the ::selection pseudo-class.
I like Tim's answer, it's clean and fast. But it also shuts down the doors to doing any interactions with the highlights.
Inserting inline elements directly around the texts is a bad choice, as they broke the text flow and mess things up in complex situations,
So I suggest a dirty hack that
calculates the absolute layout of each line of selected text (no matter where they are),
then insert colored, semi-transparent inline-block elements in the end of the document body.
This chrome extension is an example of how this can be done.
It uses API from this library to get the absolute layout of each selected line.