In my MVC javascript, I have the following code:
addEvent(document.getElementById("mta"), 'keydown', function() {
var keycode = event.which || event.keyCode;
if (keycode == 27) {
//alert(x);
window.location.reload(true);
return
}
etc...
The idea is to clear all input when the user presses the escape key. This doesn't work unless the alert is un-commented. Browser is Firefox. WTH ?
I had early today a similar problem. One of the mistakes I can see is event.keyCode, which is depreciated right now, you can replace it with event.key.
I leave you the code that worked for me.
addEventListener("keyup", function(event) {
if (event.key === "Escape") {
event.preventDefault();
window.location.reload(true);
}
});
Related
I want to prevent the default event on key #93 (select, between alt gr and ctrl right on AZERTY keyboard).
This key open context menu like right click.
I tried :
$(document).off('keydown');
$(document).off('keyup');
$(document).off('keypress');
$(document).on('keypress', function(e){
if(e.keyCode == 93)
{
e.preventDefault();
return false;
}
});
$(document).on('keyup', function(e){
if(e.keyCode == 93)
{
e.preventDefault();
return false;
}
});
$(document).on('keydown', function(e){
if(e.keyCode == 93)
{
e.preventDefault();
return false;
}
});
Nothing works... I have always the contextmenu.
After checking for a while, I've been headed to another question similar to this one, but with a very different matter.
In any case, since the problem is the context menu, you don't even need jQuery for such, and the solution (despite it WON'T always work in firefox because the user may set it to disable such) is this one:
document.oncontextmenu = function (e) {
e.preventDefault();
return false;
}
fiddle:
http://jsfiddle.net/0kkm1vq0/3/
Works on chrome as well, and you won't need to use the keyboard listeners.
Reference: How to disable right-click context-menu in javascript
(which is really the same as key #93).
** note that this will disable the right click too **.
EDIT:
Not sure if this is cross-browser (the UPDATED code below seems to be working for both chrome and firefox, didn't try IE and others though), but the event fired by key #97 seems to be identified as 1, while the click seems to be identified as key 3, so you can just:
(function($){
if (navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase().indexOf('chrome') > -1) {
$(document).on('keyup', function(e) {
e.which == 93 && e.preventDefault();
});
}
else {
document.oncontextmenu = function (e) {
e.which == 1 && e.preventDefault();
}
}
})(jQuery);
http://jsfiddle.net/0kkm1vq0/10/
To disable JUST the key and not the right click.
I have the following piece of code in an asp mvc page
$('#regForm').submit(function (event) {
if (event.keyCode == '13') {
event.preventDefault();
}
});
The aim is to prevent the form from submitting when enter is pressed.
We have noticed that in ie 11, this is not working, and on stepping into the code via debug, event.keycode is null. I have been doing some researching on this, and it seems to be an issue because we have the IE-8 Compatibility Meta Tag present on the page, which means that event.keyCode (and event.which) returns undefined for the event, and so my form is always submitted.
So how do I rewrite this to get round the issue?
You need to use the keypress event, not form submit
$('#regForm').keypress(function (event) {
if (event.keyCode == 13) {
event.preventDefault();
}
});
Try something like this, use window.event:
$('#regForm').submit(function (e) {
var keyCode = (window.event) ? e.which : e.keyCode;
if (keyCode == '13') {
e.preventDefault();
}
});
Use type="button" attribute with <button> element
So that IE thinks the button as a simple button instead of a submit button.
So form will not submit
You can also get more details from below url
http://tjvantoll.com/2013/01/01/enter-should-submit-forms-stop-messing-with-that/
$('#regForm').keypress((event) => {
if (event.key === "Enter") {
event.preventDefault();
}
});
I have a script that is supposed to open a section of a web page, and save changes on Ctrl + n and Ctrl + s respectively. I got it working in IE, but it doesn't seem to work in Firefox and Chrome. Any ideas?
My override function.
function prevent(e)
{
try{e.stopPropagation();}catch(ex){}
try{e.preventDefault()}catch(ex){}
try{if (e.preventDefault)
e.preventDefault();
else {
e.cancelBubble = true;
e.returnValue = false;
e.keyCode = 0;
}} catch(ex){}
}
I have seen the same issue. Some browsers will not allow you to capture certain shortcuts. Look at this https://stackoverflow.com/a/7296303/1366887
Some key combinations are resticted in Chrome 4, but not in Chrome 3. Look here: https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/chromium-bugs/Ntc1byZXHfU
Here is the Javascript:
$(window).keydown(function(event) {
if(event.ctrlKey && event.keyCode == 84) {
console.log("Hey! Ctrl+T event captured!");
event.preventDefault();
}
if(event.ctrlKey && event.keyCode == 83) {
console.log("Hey! Ctrl+S event captured!");
event.preventDefault();
}
});
I have used this numerous times, and it has worked greatly.
Here is another rescource you can take a look at: http://unixpapa.com/js/key.html
Without Jquery:
onkeydown = function(e){
if(e.ctrlKey && e.keyCode == 'S'.charCodeAt(0)){
e.preventDefault();
//your saving code
}
}
Here is a JSFIDDLE of it working.
For anyone looking for this in the future, the answer for current browsers is the following:
if (event.ctrlKey && event.key === 'k') event.preventDefault()
i try to bind an event to done action on soft keyboard tell mode.
but i can't catch any event.
i tried use keyup/ keydown, blur and change events.
nothing happened in iPhone and android.
$("input").bind('keyup', function(event){
var key;
if(window.event)
key = window.event.keyCode;
else
key = event.which;
if(key == 13 || key == 10){
alert(key);
}
});
$("input").bind('blur', function(event){
alert("blur");
});
$("input").bind('change', function(event){
alert("change");
});
Any solution?
You are missing a close } after the one if.
Also, maybe the selector you are using $('input') is too broad try something specific, i use somelike like this:
$('#element_id').live('keypress',function(e){
console.log('keypress: '+e.keyCode);
if (e.keyCode != 13) {
console.log('is not an enter key');
}
else {
console.log('is an enter key going to submit');
Fling.poo();
return false;
}
});
Possible Duplicate:
Which keycode for escape key with jQuery
How to detect escape key press in IE, Firefox and Chrome?
Below code works in IE and alerts 27, but in Firefox it alerts 0
$('body').keypress(function(e){
alert(e.which);
if(e.which == 27){
// Close my modal window
}
});
Note: keyCode is becoming deprecated, use key instead.
function keyPress (e) {
if(e.key === "Escape") {
// write your logic here.
}
}
Code Snippet:
var msg = document.getElementById('state-msg');
document.body.addEventListener('keypress', function(e) {
if (e.key == "Escape") {
msg.textContent += 'Escape pressed:'
}
});
Press ESC key <span id="state-msg"></span>
keyCode is becoming deprecated
It seems keydown and keyup work, even though keypress may not
$(document).keyup(function(e) {
if (e.key === "Escape") { // escape key maps to keycode `27`
// <DO YOUR WORK HERE>
}
});
Which keycode for escape key with jQuery
The keydown event will work fine for Escape and has the benefit of allowing you to use keyCode in all browsers. Also, you need to attach the listener to document rather than the body.
Update May 2016
keyCode is now in the process of being deprecated and most modern browsers offer the key property now, although you'll still need a fallback for decent browser support for now (at time of writing the current releases of Chrome and Safari don't support it).
Update September 2018
evt.key is now supported by all modern browsers.
document.onkeydown = function(evt) {
evt = evt || window.event;
var isEscape = false;
if ("key" in evt) {
isEscape = (evt.key === "Escape" || evt.key === "Esc");
} else {
isEscape = (evt.keyCode === 27);
}
if (isEscape) {
alert("Escape");
}
};
Click me then press the Escape key
Using JavaScript you can do check working jsfiddle
document.onkeydown = function(evt) {
evt = evt || window.event;
if (evt.keyCode == 27) {
alert('Esc key pressed.');
}
};
Using jQuery you can do check working jsfiddle
jQuery(document).on('keyup',function(evt) {
if (evt.keyCode == 27) {
alert('Esc key pressed.');
}
});
check for keyCode && which & keyup || keydown
$(document).keydown(function(e){
var code = e.keyCode || e.which;
alert(code);
});
Pure JS
you can attach a listener to keyUp event for the document.
Also, if you want to make sure, any other key is not pressed along with Esc key, you can use values of ctrlKey, altKey, and shifkey.
document.addEventListener('keydown', (event) => {
if (event.key === 'Escape') {
//if esc key was not pressed in combination with ctrl or alt or shift
const isNotCombinedKey = !(event.ctrlKey || event.altKey || event.shiftKey);
if (isNotCombinedKey) {
console.log('Escape key was pressed with out any group keys')
}
}
});
pure JS (no JQuery)
document.addEventListener('keydown', function(e) {
if(e.keyCode == 27){
//add your code here
}
});
Below is the code that not only disables the ESC key but also checks the condition where it is pressed and depending on the situation, it will do the action or not.
In this example,
e.preventDefault();
will disable the ESC key-press action.
You may do anything like to hide a div with this:
document.getElementById('myDivId').style.display = 'none';
Where the ESC key pressed is also taken into consideration:
(e.target.nodeName=='BODY')
You may remove this if condition part if you like to apply to this to all. Or you may target INPUT here to only apply this action when the cursor is in input box.
window.addEventListener('keydown', function(e){
if((e.key=='Escape'||e.key=='Esc'||e.keyCode==27) && (e.target.nodeName=='BODY')){
e.preventDefault();
return false;
}
}, true);
Best way is to make function for this
FUNCTION:
$.fn.escape = function (callback) {
return this.each(function () {
$(document).on("keydown", this, function (e) {
var keycode = ((typeof e.keyCode !='undefined' && e.keyCode) ? e.keyCode : e.which);
if (keycode === 27) {
callback.call(this, e);
};
});
});
};
EXAMPLE:
$("#my-div").escape(function () {
alert('Escape!');
})
On Firefox 78 use this ("keypress" doesn't work for Escape key):
function keyPress (e)(){
if (e.key == "Escape"){
//do something here
}
document.addEventListener("keyup", keyPress);
i think the simplest way is vanilla javascript:
document.onkeyup = function(event) {
if (event.keyCode === 27){
//do something here
}
}
Updated: Changed key => keyCode