jQuery: selectionStart returns undefined - javascript

Situation
browser
Google Chtome 69
html
<textarea id="message" name="message">
// input some messsage
</textarea>
js(jQuery)
$(function () {
$("#message").on("keydown keyup keypress change", function () {
//this part runs correctly
})
$('#message').on('keydown', function (e) {
if ((e.wich && e.wich === 13) || (e.keyCode && e.keyCode === 13)) {
var $textarea = $(this);
var sentence = $textarea.val();
var position = $textarea.selectionStart;
var length = sentence.length;
var before = sentence.substr(0, position);
var after = sentence.substr(position, length);
sentence = before + "\n" + after;
}
});
});
When I input something in the #message textarea and push Enter key in the area, nothing would happen. According to Chrome developer tool, selectionStart method seems to return Undefined.
Needs
Enter key has been made disabled in this form page in order to avoid submitting the data mitakenly.
js
function fnCancelEnter()
{
if (gCssUA.indexOf("WIN") != -1 && gCssUA.indexOf("MSIE") != -1) {
if (window.event.keyCode == 13)
{
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
However, in this textarea, I want to enable user to add a break line by pressing Enter key.
I'm sorry but I don't have much knowledge about jQuery and javascript. Please tell me how to do.

Please replace $textarea.selectionStart by $textarea.get(0).selectionStart. Then try again.

Related

JavaScript how to make backspace work in my keyCode text prompt?

I'm creating a way to type anywhere by intercepting the keydown event instead of using a text box for a project. I'm having trouble finding out how to implement the backspace. This is a shortened version of my code:
$(document).keydown(function(event){
typed = String.fromCharCode(event.keyCode);
display += typed;
document.getElementById("text").innerHTML = letterContainer;
});
I was trying to use the .replace function like this...
if (event.keyCode == 8) {
display.replace(typed,'');
}
...and put it at the beginning, but that doesn't work. Any ideas?
You're getting there. How are you emptying the text in the input tag?
if (event.keyCode == 8) {
display.replace(typed,'');
// ^ This does not change the value of the <input>
}
I'd suggest something like:
function isDeleteKeyCode(event) {
return event && event.keyCode === 8;
}
function resetValue(element) {
element.value = '';
}
$('#input-id').keydown(function(event) {
if (isDeleteKeyCode(event)) {
resetValue(event.target);
}
// ^ This can be simplified as: isDeleteKeyCode(event) && resetValue(event.target)
});
That would add a keydown listener to an input tag with id="input-id".
Demo: https://jsfiddle.net/pp16tru7/
var display = '';
$(document).keydown(function(event) {
var typed = String.fromCharCode(event.keyCode);
// if backspace, get text without the last character, else add character to display
if (event.keyCode === 8) {
display = display.substr(0, display.length - 1);
} else {
display += typed;
}
document.getElementById("text").innerHTML = display;
});

Deleting Single Element From Same Function

For the following code:
document.getElementById('text_one').onkeypress = function (e) {
if (!e) e = window.event;
var keyCode = e.keyCode || e.which;
if (keyCode == '13') {
text = document.getElementById('text_one').value;
if (text == "" || text === null || text.length > 50) {
$('#error_msg').show('slow');
document.getElementById('text_one').disabled = true;
document.getElementById('text_one').value = "";
return false;
} else {
$('#list').append('<li>' + text + '</li><br />');
document.getElementById('text_one').value = "";
}
}
};
How would one go about making a function that deletes the element which was clicked? I was thinking that you could somehow create a specific number that increases every time the function is run and use that number to create custom ID's but I'm not sure how to do that.
JS Fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/2dd5L/ (The CSS is messed up for some reason)
Since you are using jQuery it's very simple (in pure JS also just 2 more lines of code):
$('#list').on('click', 'li', function() {
$(this).remove();
});
Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/2dd5L/1/

How to replace code to use RegExp

I have the following code which checks for "enter" key as well as prevent the use of > and < sign in the textbox.
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
function checkKeycode(e) {
var keycode;
if (window.event) // IE
keycode = e.keyCode;
else if (e.which) // Netscape/Firefox/Opera
keycode = e.which;
if (keycode == 13) {
//Get the button the user wants to have clicked
var btn = document.getElementById(btnSearch);
if (btn != null) { //If we find the button click it
btn.click();
event.keyCode = 0
}
//Removed when above code was added 12-09-13
//CallSearch();
}
}
function CallSearch() {
var objsearchText = window.document.getElementById('txtSearchText');
var searchText;
if ((objsearchText!=null))
{
searchText = objsearchText.value;
searchText = searchText.replace(/>/gi, " >");
searchText = searchText.replace(/</gi, "< ");
objsearchText.value = searchText;
}
//This cookie is used for the backbutton to work in search on postback
//This cookie must be cleared to prevent old search results from displayed
document.cookie='postbackcookie=';
document.location.href="search_results.aspx?searchtext=";
}
</script>
How can I shorten the code to be more effecient and use the onBlur function and to use RegExp instead of replace? Or is replace a faster method than RegExp?
You are saying that you want to prevent < and > chars. Here is an easier way, just ignore these chars when the keydown event occurs on them.
Also I suggest to use jQuery - if you can.
http://api.jquery.com/event.which/
var ignoredChars = [188, 190]; // <, >
$('#myTextField').keydown(function(e) {
if(ignoredChars.indexOf(e.which) > -1) {
e.preventDefault();
e.stopPropagation();
return false;
}
})
.keyup(function(e) {
if(e.which === 13) {
$('#searchButton').click();
}
});
Just add this event handler to your textbox and remove the regexp replacements.
If you don't want characters to be input by user, surpress them as early as possible. This way you won't get in trouble fiddling them out of a big string later.

jquery ctrl+enter as enter in text area

I am trying to reproduce standard instant messenger behavior on TEXT area control:
enter works as send button. ctrl+enter as real enter.
$("#txtChatMessage").keydown(MessageTextOnKeyEnter);
function MessageTextOnKeyEnter(e)
{
if (!e.ctrlKey && e.keyCode == 13)
{
SendMessage();
return false;
}
else if(e.keyCode == 13)
{
$(this).val($(this).val() + "\n");
}
return true;
}
I have tried with both commented line and without. Not works. simple enter works as expected.
Any ideas how to add enter on ctrl+enter?
key code is not problem. they are detected correctly. so all if's works as expected. But appending new line works incorrectly (in FF, Chrome works correctly). So I need correct multibrowser way to insert new line symbol to textarea. If without adding string manually (by some event based on ctrl+enter) it will be better.
changing on keypress event has no effect. "\r\n" not helped.
test page located here
The following will work in all the major browsers, including IE. It will behave exactly as though the enter key had been pressed when you press ctrl-enter:
function MessageTextOnKeyEnter(e) {
if (e.keyCode == 13) {
if (e.ctrlKey) {
var val = this.value;
if (typeof this.selectionStart == "number" && typeof this.selectionEnd == "number") {
var start = this.selectionStart;
this.value = val.slice(0, start) + "\n" + val.slice(this.selectionEnd);
this.selectionStart = this.selectionEnd = start + 1;
} else if (document.selection && document.selection.createRange) {
this.focus();
var range = document.selection.createRange();
range.text = "\r\n";
range.collapse(false);
range.select();
}
}
return false;
}
}
wow what a pain in the ass. i've been playing with this for a while and i have to assume this is just IE being uncooperative. anyway, this is the best i could do this morning and it's super hacky, but maybe you can gain something from it.
explanation: i'm testing with ie8, a textarea element, and courier new. results may vary. ascii character 173 (0xAD) does not display a character, although it counts as a character when moving your cursor around. appending this char after you force a newline gets ie to move the cursor down. before the call to SendMessage we replace the extra char with nothing.
function MessageTextOnKeyEnter(e)
{
var dummy = "\xAD";
if (!e.ctrlKey && e.keyCode == 13)
{
var regex = new RegExp(dummy,"g");
var newval = $(this).val().replace(regex, '');
$(this).val(newval);
SendMessage();
return false;
}
else if(e.keyCode == 13)
{
$(this).val($(this).val() + "\n" + dummy);
}
return true;
}
if you try to do the replacement on every keystroke it's not going to work very well. you might be able to deal with this by white/blacklisting keys and find a method to put the cursor back in the text where it's supposed to go.
A few potential causes:
Define the function before you reference it.
Make sure you're binding the event in the document.ready event, so that the dom item exists when you reference it.
Change else (e.keyCode == 13) to else if (e.keyCode == 13).
Make sure this is a textarea, not an input[type=text].
Consider using keypress instead of keydown.
Some browsers will send keyCode == 10 instead of keyCode == 13 when using the ctrl modifier key (some browsers will send it even when you aren't using the ctrl modifier key).
My answer leads from Ian Henry's answer about keyCode == 10, which seems to be the case in IE (tested in 8 & 9). Check if you are dealing with a windows event and ket the key code.
$('#formID #textareaID').keypress(function(e) {
if(window.event) {
var keyCode = window.event.keyCode;
}
else {
var keyCode = e.keyCode || e.which;
}
if( (!e.ctrlKey && (keyCode == 13)) ) {
//do stuff and submit form
}
else if( (e.ctrlKey && (keyCode == 13)) || (keyCode == 10) ) {
//do stuff and add new line to content
}
});
You can check for the ctrl and alt as in
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#myinput').keydown(function(e) {
var keysare = 'key code is: ' + e.which + ' ' + (e.ctrlKey ? 'Ctrl' : '') + ' ' + (e.shiftKey ? 'Shift' : '') + ' ' + (e.altKey ? 'Alt' : '');
//alert(keysare);
$('#mycurrentkey').text(keysare);
return false;
});
});
See a working example here: http://jsfiddle.net/VcyAH/
If you can stick with Shift+Enter instead of Ctrl+Enter then the solution is trivial. You don't need any special code as Shift+Enter triggers a line break automatically. Just catch plain Enter to do the sending.

Enter key press behaves like a Tab in Javascript

I'm looking to create a form where pressing the enter key causes focus to go to the "next" form element on the page. The solution I keep finding on the web is...
<body onkeydown="if(event.keyCode==13){event.keyCode=9; return event.keyCode}">
Unfortunately, that only seems to work in IE. So the real meat of this question is if anybody knows of a solution that works for FF and Chrome? Additionally, I'd rather not have to add onkeydown events to the form elements themselves, but if that's the only way, it will have to do.
This issue is similar to question 905222, but deserving of it's own question in my opinion.
Edit: also, I've seen people bring up the issue that this isn't good style, as it diverges from form behavior that users are used to. I agree! It's a client request :(
I used the logic suggested by Andrew which is very effective. And this is my version:
$('body').on('keydown', 'input, select', function(e) {
if (e.key === "Enter") {
var self = $(this), form = self.parents('form:eq(0)'), focusable, next;
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button,textarea').filter(':visible');
next = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this)+1);
if (next.length) {
next.focus();
} else {
form.submit();
}
return false;
}
});
KeyboardEvent's keycode (i.e: e.keycode) depreciation notice :- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/KeyboardEvent/keyCode
The simplest vanilla JS snippet I came up with:
document.addEventListener('keydown', function (event) {
if (event.keyCode === 13 && event.target.nodeName === 'INPUT') {
var form = event.target.form;
var index = Array.prototype.indexOf.call(form, event.target);
form.elements[index + 1].focus();
event.preventDefault();
}
});
Works in IE 9+ and modern browsers.
Map [Enter] key to work like the [Tab] key
I've rewritten Andre Van Zuydam's answer, which didn't work for me, in jQuery. This caputures both Enter and Shift+Enter. Enter tabs forward, and Shift+Enter tabs back.
I've also rewritten the way self is initialized by the current item in focus. The form is also selected that way. Here's the code:
// Map [Enter] key to work like the [Tab] key
// Daniel P. Clark 2014
// Catch the keydown for the entire document
$(document).keydown(function(e) {
// Set self as the current item in focus
var self = $(':focus'),
// Set the form by the current item in focus
form = self.parents('form:eq(0)'),
focusable;
// Array of Indexable/Tab-able items
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button,textarea,div[contenteditable=true]').filter(':visible');
function enterKey(){
if (e.which === 13 && !self.is('textarea,div[contenteditable=true]')) { // [Enter] key
// If not a regular hyperlink/button/textarea
if ($.inArray(self, focusable) && (!self.is('a,button'))){
// Then prevent the default [Enter] key behaviour from submitting the form
e.preventDefault();
} // Otherwise follow the link/button as by design, or put new line in textarea
// Focus on the next item (either previous or next depending on shift)
focusable.eq(focusable.index(self) + (e.shiftKey ? -1 : 1)).focus();
return false;
}
}
// We need to capture the [Shift] key and check the [Enter] key either way.
if (e.shiftKey) { enterKey() } else { enterKey() }
});
The reason textarea
is included is because we "do" want to tab into it. Also, once in, we don't want to stop the default behavior of Enter from putting in a new line.
The reason a and button
allow the default action, "and" still focus on the next item, is because they don't always load another page. There can be a trigger/effect on those such as an accordion or tabbed content. So once you trigger the default behavior, and the page does its special effect, you still want to go to the next item since your trigger may have well introduced it.
Thank you for the good script.
I have just added the shift event on the above function to go back between elements, I thought someone may need this.
$('body').on('keydown', 'input, select, textarea', function(e) {
var self = $(this)
, form = self.parents('form:eq(0)')
, focusable
, next
, prev
;
if (e.shiftKey) {
if (e.keyCode == 13) {
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button,textarea').filter(':visible');
prev = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this)-1);
if (prev.length) {
prev.focus();
} else {
form.submit();
}
}
}
else
if (e.keyCode == 13) {
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button,textarea').filter(':visible');
next = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this)+1);
if (next.length) {
next.focus();
} else {
form.submit();
}
return false;
}
});
This worked for me:
$(document).on('keydown', ':tabbable', function(e) {
if (e.key === "Enter") {
e.preventDefault();
var $canfocus = $(':tabbable:visible');
var index = $canfocus.index(document.activeElement) + 1;
if (index >= $canfocus.length) index = 0;
$canfocus.eq(index).focus();
}
});
Changing this behaviour actually creates a far better user experience than the default behaviour implemented natively. Consider that the behaviour of the enter key is already inconsistent from the user's point of view, because in a single line input, enter tends to submit a form, while in a multi-line textarea, it simply adds a newline to the contents of the field.
I recently did it like this (uses jQuery):
$('input.enterastab, select.enterastab, textarea.enterastab').live('keydown', function(e) {
if (e.keyCode==13) {
var focusable = $('input,a,select,button,textarea').filter(':visible');
focusable.eq(focusable.index(this)+1).focus();
return false;
}
});
This is not terribly efficient, but works well enough and is reliable - just add the 'enterastab' class to any input element that should behave in this way.
I reworked the OPs solution into a Knockout binding and thought I'd share it. Thanks very much :-)
Here's a Fiddle
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" >
<head>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.1/jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script src="http://ajax.aspnetcdn.com/ajax/knockout/knockout-2.2.1.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
</head>
<body>
<div data-bind="nextFieldOnEnter:true">
<input type="text" />
<input type="text" />
<select>
<option value="volvo">Volvo</option>
<option value="saab">Saab</option>
<option value="mercedes">Mercedes</option>
<option value="audi">Audi</option>
</select>
<input type="text" />
<input type="text" />
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
ko.bindingHandlers.nextFieldOnEnter = {
init: function(element, valueAccessor, allBindingsAccessor) {
$(element).on('keydown', 'input, select', function (e) {
var self = $(this)
, form = $(element)
, focusable
, next
;
if (e.keyCode == 13) {
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button,textarea').filter(':visible');
var nextIndex = focusable.index(this) == focusable.length -1 ? 0 : focusable.index(this) + 1;
next = focusable.eq(nextIndex);
next.focus();
return false;
}
});
}
};
ko.applyBindings({});
</script>
</body>
</html>
Here is an angular.js directive to make enter go to the next field using the other answers as inspiration. There is some, perhaps, odd looking code here because I only use the jQlite packaged with angular. I believe most of the features here work in all browsers > IE8.
angular.module('myapp', [])
.directive('pdkNextInputOnEnter', function() {
var includeTags = ['INPUT', 'SELECT'];
function link(scope, element, attrs) {
element.on('keydown', function (e) {
// Go to next form element on enter and only for included tags
if (e.keyCode == 13 && includeTags.indexOf(e.target.tagName) != -1) {
// Find all form elements that can receive focus
var focusable = element[0].querySelectorAll('input,select,button,textarea');
// Get the index of the currently focused element
var currentIndex = Array.prototype.indexOf.call(focusable, e.target)
// Find the next items in the list
var nextIndex = currentIndex == focusable.length - 1 ? 0 : currentIndex + 1;
// Focus the next element
if(nextIndex >= 0 && nextIndex < focusable.length)
focusable[nextIndex].focus();
return false;
}
});
}
return {
restrict: 'A',
link: link
};
});
Here's how I use it in the app I'm working on, by just adding the pdk-next-input-on-enter directive on an element. I am using a barcode scanner to enter data into fields, the default function of the scanner is to emulate a keayboard, injecting an enter key after typing the data of the scanned barcode.
There is one side-effect to this code (a positive one for my use-case), if it moves focus onto a button, the enter keyup event will cause the button's action to be activated. This worked really well for my flow as the last form element in my markup is a button that I want activated once all the fields have been "tabbed" through by scanning barcodes.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html ng-app=myapp>
<head>
<script src="angular.min.js"></script>
<script src="controller.js"></script>
</head>
<body ng-controller="LabelPrintingController">
<div class='.container' pdk-next-input-on-enter>
<select ng-options="p for p in partNumbers" ng-model="selectedPart" ng-change="selectedPartChanged()"></select>
<h2>{{labelDocument.SerialNumber}}</h2>
<div ng-show="labelDocument.ComponentSerials">
<b>Component Serials</b>
<ul>
<li ng-repeat="serial in labelDocument.ComponentSerials">
{{serial.name}}<br/>
<input type="text" ng-model="serial.value" />
</li>
</ul>
</div>
<button ng-click="printLabel()">Print</button>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Try this...
$(document).ready(function () {
$.fn.enterkeytab = function () {
$(this).on('keydown', 'input,select,text,button', function (e) {
var self = $(this)
, form = self.parents('form:eq(0)')
, focusable
, next
;
if (e.keyCode == 13) {
focusable = form.find('input,a,select').filter(':visible');
next = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this) + 1);
if (next.length) {
//if disable try get next 10 fields
if (next.is(":disabled")){
for(i=2;i<10;i++){
next = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this) + i);
if (!next.is(":disabled"))
break;
}
}
next.focus();
}
return false;
}
});
}
$("form").enterkeytab();
});
I've had a similar problem, where I wanted to press + on the numpad to tab to the next field. Now I've released a library that I think will help you.
PlusAsTab: A jQuery plugin to use the numpad plus key as a tab key equivalent.
Since you want enter/↵ instead, you can set the options. Find out which key you want to use with the jQuery event.which demo.
JoelPurra.PlusAsTab.setOptions({
// Use enter instead of plus
// Number 13 found through demo at
// https://api.jquery.com/event.which/
key: 13
});
// Matches all inputs with name "a[]" (needs some character escaping)
$('input[name=a\\[\\]]').plusAsTab();
You can try it out yourself in the PlusAsTab enter as tab demo.
function return2tab (div)
{
document.addEventListener('keydown', function (ev) {
if (ev.key === "Enter" && ev.target.nodeName === 'INPUT') {
var focusableElementsString = 'a[href], area[href], input:not([disabled]), select:not([disabled]), textarea:not([disabled]), button:not([disabled]), iframe, object, embed, [tabindex="0"], [contenteditable]';
let ol= div.querySelectorAll(focusableElementsString);
for (let i=0; i<ol.length; i++) {
if (ol[i] === ev.target) {
let o= i<ol.length-1? ol[i+1]: o[0];
o.focus(); break;
}
}
ev.preventDefault();
}
});
}
I have it working in only JavaScript. Firefox won't let you update the keyCode, so all you can do is trap keyCode 13 and force it to focus on the next element by tabIndex as if keyCode 9 was pressed. The tricky part is finding the next tabIndex. I have tested this only on IE8-IE10 and Firefox and it works:
function ModifyEnterKeyPressAsTab(event)
{
var caller;
var key;
if (window.event)
{
caller = window.event.srcElement; //Get the event caller in IE.
key = window.event.keyCode; //Get the keycode in IE.
}
else
{
caller = event.target; //Get the event caller in Firefox.
key = event.which; //Get the keycode in Firefox.
}
if (key == 13) //Enter key was pressed.
{
cTab = caller.tabIndex; //caller tabIndex.
maxTab = 0; //highest tabIndex (start at 0 to change)
minTab = cTab; //lowest tabIndex (this may change, but start at caller)
allById = document.getElementsByTagName("input"); //Get input elements.
allByIndex = []; //Storage for elements by index.
c = 0; //index of the caller in allByIndex (start at 0 to change)
i = 0; //generic indexer for allByIndex;
for (id in allById) //Loop through all the input elements by id.
{
allByIndex[i] = allById[id]; //Set allByIndex.
tab = allByIndex[i].tabIndex;
if (caller == allByIndex[i])
c = i; //Get the index of the caller.
if (tab > maxTab)
maxTab = tab; //Get the highest tabIndex on the page.
if (tab < minTab && tab >= 0)
minTab = tab; //Get the lowest positive tabIndex on the page.
i++;
}
//Loop through tab indexes from caller to highest.
for (tab = cTab; tab <= maxTab; tab++)
{
//Look for this tabIndex from the caller to the end of page.
for (i = c + 1; i < allByIndex.length; i++)
{
if (allByIndex[i].tabIndex == tab)
{
allByIndex[i].focus(); //Move to that element and stop.
return;
}
}
//Look for the next tabIndex from the start of page to the caller.
for (i = 0; i < c; i++)
{
if (allByIndex[i].tabIndex == tab + 1)
{
allByIndex[i].focus(); //Move to that element and stop.
return;
}
}
//Continue searching from the caller for the next tabIndex.
}
//The caller was the last element with the highest tabIndex,
//so find the first element with the lowest tabIndex.
for (i = 0; i < allByIndex.length; i++)
{
if (allByIndex[i].tabIndex == minTab)
{
allByIndex[i].focus(); //Move to that element and stop.
return;
}
}
}
}
To use this code, add it to your html input tag:
<input id="SomeID" onkeydown="ModifyEnterKeyPressAsTab(event);" ... >
Or add it to an element in javascript:
document.getElementById("SomeID").onKeyDown = ModifyEnterKeyPressAsTab;
A couple other notes:
I only needed it to work on my input elements, but you could extend it to other document elements if you need to. For this, getElementsByClassName is very helpful, but that is a whole other topic.
A limitation is that it only tabs between the elements that you have added to your allById array. It does not tab around to the other things that your browser might, like toolbars and menus outside your html document. Perhaps this is a feature instead of a limitation. If you like, trap keyCode 9 and this behavior will work with the tab key too.
You can use my code below, tested in Mozilla, IE, and Chrome
// Use to act like tab using enter key
$.fn.enterkeytab=function(){
$(this).on('keydown', 'input, select,', function(e) {
var self = $(this)
, form = self.parents('form:eq(0)')
, focusable
, next
;
if (e.keyCode == 13) {
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button').filter(':visible');
next = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this)+1);
if (next.length) {
next.focus();
} else {
alert("wd");
//form.submit();
}
return false;
}
});
}
How to Use?
$("#form").enterkeytab(); // enter key tab
If you can I would reconsider doing this: the default action of pressing <Enter> while in a form submits the form and anything you do to change this default action / expected behaviour could cause some usability issues with the site.
Vanilla js with support for Shift + Enter and ability to choose which HTML tags are focusable. Should work IE9+.
onKeyUp(e) {
switch (e.keyCode) {
case 13: //Enter
var focusableElements = document.querySelectorAll('input, button')
var index = Array.prototype.indexOf.call(focusableElements, document.activeElement)
if(e.shiftKey)
focus(focusableElements, index - 1)
else
focus(focusableElements, index + 1)
e.preventDefault()
break;
}
function focus(elements, index) {
if(elements[index])
elements[index].focus()
}
}
Here's what I came up with.
form.addEventListener("submit", (e) => { //On Submit
let key = e.charCode || e.keyCode || 0 //get the key code
if (key = 13) { //If enter key
e.preventDefault()
const inputs = Array.from(document.querySelectorAll("form input")) //Get array of inputs
let nextInput = inputs[inputs.indexOf(document.activeElement) + 1] //get index of input after the current input
nextInput.focus() //focus new input
}
}
Many answers here uses e.keyCode and e.which that are deprecated.
Instead you should use e.key === 'Enter'.
Documentation: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/KeyboardEvent/keyCode
I'm sorry but I can't test these snippets just now. Will come back later after testing it.
With HTML:
<body onkeypress="if(event.key==='Enter' && event.target.form){focusNextElement(event); return false;}">
With jQuery:
$(window).on('keypress', function (ev)
{
if (ev.key === "Enter" && ev.currentTarget.form) focusNextElement(ev)
}
And with Vanilla JS:
document.addEventListener('keypress', function (ev) {
if (ev.key === "Enter" && ev.currentTarget.form) focusNextElement(ev);
});
You can take focusNextElement() function from here:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/35173443/3356679
Easiest way to solve this problem with the focus function of JavaScript as follows:
You can copy and try it # home!
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en" dir="ltr">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title></title>
</head>
<body>
<input id="input1" type="text" onkeypress="pressEnter()" />
<input id="input2" type="text" onkeypress="pressEnter2()" />
<input id="input3" type="text"/>
<script type="text/javascript">
function pressEnter() {
// Key Code for ENTER = 13
if ((event.keyCode == 13)) {
document.getElementById("input2").focus({preventScroll:false});
}
}
function pressEnter2() {
if ((event.keyCode == 13)) {
document.getElementById("input3").focus({preventScroll:false});
}
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
I had a problem to use enter key instead of Tab in React js .The solution of anjana-silva is working fine and just some small issue for input date and autocomplete as I am using MUI . So I change it a bit and add arrow keys (left/right) as well .
install jquery using npm
npm install jquery --save
write the below in App.js If you want to have this behavior In the whole of your application
import $ from 'jquery';
useEffect(() => {
$('body').on('keydown', 'input, select,button', function (e) {
if (e.keyCode === 13 || e.keyCode === 39) {
var self = $(this), form = self.parents('form:eq(0)'), focusable, next;
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button,textarea').filter(':visible:not([readonly]):enabled');
next = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this) + 1);
if (next.length) {
next.focus();
}
return false;
}
if (e.keyCode === 37) {
var self = $(this), form = self.parents('form:eq(0)'), focusable, prev;
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button,textarea').filter(':visible:not([readonly]):enabled');
prev = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this) - 1);
if (prev.length) {
prev.focus();
}
return false;
}
});
}, []);
I had a simular need.
Here is what I did:
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
function convertEnterToTab() {
if(event.keyCode==13) {
event.keyCode = 9;
}
}
document.onkeydown = convertEnterToTab;
</script>
In all that cases, only works in Chrome and IE, I added the following code to solve that:
var key = (window.event) ? e.keyCode : e.which;
and I tested the key value on if keycode equals 13
$('body').on('keydown', 'input, select, textarea', function (e) {
var self = $(this)
, form = self.parents('form:eq(0)')
, focusable
, next
;
var key = (window.event) ? e.keyCode : e.which;
if (key == 13) {
focusable = form.find('input,a,select,button,textarea').filter(':visible');
next = focusable.eq(focusable.index(this) + 1);
if (next.length) {
next.focus();
} else {
focusable.click();
}
return false;
}
});
$("#form input , select , textarea").keypress(function(e){
if(e.keyCode == 13){
var enter_position = $(this).index();
$("#form input , select , textarea").eq(enter_position+1).focus();
}
});
You could programatically iterate the form elements adding the onkeydown handler as you go. This way you can reuse the code.

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