元素,maxlength 不起作用。如何限制该数字元素的 maxlength?" /> 元素,maxlength 不起作用。如何限制该数字元素的 maxlength?"> 元素,maxlength 不起作用。如何限制该数字元素的 maxlength?" />
ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

How can I set max-length in an HTML5 "input type=number" element?

For <input type="number"> element, maxlength is not working. How can I restrict the maxlength for that number element?

max attribute doesn't work in chrome browser in android tablet.

C
Community

And you can add a max attribute that will specify the highest possible number that you may insert

<input type="number" max="999" />

if you add both a max and a min value you can specify the range of allowed values:

<input type="number" min="1" max="999" />

The above will still not stop a user from manually entering a value outside of the specified range. Instead he will be displayed a popup telling him to enter a value within this range upon submitting the form as shown in this screenshot:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/z0OHu.png


Krister, this worked. Also as @Andy said i have used the oninput to slice the additional numbers. Reference mathiasbynens.be/notes/oninput
This is correct, but should be noted as Andy states that this does not restrict one from typing a longer number. So it's not really the equivalent of maxlength in a text field.
DA : sure, but you could use min="-999" max="999" to fake maxlength="3".
If you simply entered a higher precision float, this will break. E.g. 3.1415926 gets around this because it is less than 999 and greater than 1.
I don't know why this is so upvoted and accepted when it simply doesn't work! It only affects the "spinner" controls, and does nothing to stop the user typing a long number in.
J
Jackson

You can specify the min and max attributes, which will allow input only within a specific range.

<!-- equivalent to maxlength=4 -->
<input type="number" min="-9999" max="9999">

This only works for the spinner control buttons, however. Although the user may be able to type a number greater than the allowed max, the form will not submit.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/7WtAa.png

You can use the HTML5 oninput event in JavaScript to limit the number of characters:

myInput.oninput = function () {
    if (this.value.length > 4) {
        this.value = this.value.slice(0,4); 
    }
}

One possible issue with that JavaScript approach: It might not work as expected if the insertion point isn't at the end of the value. For example, if you enter the value "1234" in the input field, then move the insertion point back to the beginning of the value and type "5", you end up with the value "5123". This is different than an input type="text" field with a maxlength of 4, where the browser won't let you type a 5th character into the "full" field, and the value would remain "1234".
@Andy, Obviously the question is looking for a non-JS way to do maxlength.............
@Pacerier: did something in my answer imply that I thought otherwise? As you can see, I offered the closest possible solution that can be achieved using only HTML, along with an additional suggestion that uses JavaScript where the OP might have wanted to prevent the user typing more characters than permitted.
D
Duane

If you are looking for a Mobile Web solution in which you wish your user to see a number pad rather than a full text keyboard. Use type="tel". It will work with maxlength which saves you from creating extra javascript.

Max and Min will still allow the user to Type in numbers in excess of max and min, which is not optimal.


I've found that this isn't the best solution for numeric input because a "tel" input allows for additional symbols, and it displays letters beside each number. The purely numeric keyboard looks much cleaner.
@hawkharris You are correct, type="number" is the cleaner UI. It is easier to accidentally type in a bad char. So additional validation is needed to ensure the user doesn't enter bad data. But also consider that the user could just as easily enter all decimal points as well with a number keyboard. Also it does not solve the question above without additional JavaScript.
if used with pattern="[0-9]*" the extra symbols will be disabled
But the tel type will be read a such by assistive technologies, letting think the user needs to enter a phone number. This is worse than using the default text type...
This is one of the best summaries of user-friendly numeric input modes: css-tricks.com/finger-friendly-numerical-inputs-with-inputmode To save you a click, this HTML covers a lot of ground, and supports lots of browsers: <input type="number" inputMode="numeric" pattern="[0-9]*" min="1" max="2112"> Then you can enhance this with some JavaScript if you need 🙃
C
Community

You can combine all of these like this:

<input name="myinput_drs"
oninput="maxLengthCheck(this)"
type = "number"
maxlength = "3"
min = "1"
max = "999" />

<script>
  // This is an old version, for a more recent version look at
  // https://jsfiddle.net/DRSDavidSoft/zb4ft1qq/2/
  function maxLengthCheck(object)
  {
    if (object.value.length > object.maxLength)
      object.value = object.value.slice(0, object.maxLength)
  }
</script>


Update:
You might also want to prevent any non-numeric characters to be entered, because object.length would be an empty string for the number inputs, and therefore its length would be 0. Thus the maxLengthCheck function won't work.

Solution:
See this or this for examples.

Demo - See the full version of the code here:
http://jsfiddle.net/DRSDavidSoft/zb4ft1qq/1/

Update 2: Here's the update code: https://jsfiddle.net/DRSDavidSoft/zb4ft1qq/2/

Update 3: Please note that allowing more than a decimal point to be entered can mess up with the numeral value.


This is a good solution, but I find that object.value.length returns 0 if there are any non-numeric values entered.
@AndrewSpear That's because object.value would be an empty string if you enter non-numeric values in inputs with a type of 'number' set. See the documentation. Also, please read my update in order to fix this problem.
This still breaks if you input more than one decimal point, like 111..1111. Don't use this code for security, as malicious code may still get passed through.
@PieBie Dude, this code is for 3+ years ago. Use jQuery instead.
yeah, I know that, but beginners might still just copy-paste it.
R
Richard

Or if your max value is for example 99 and minimum 0, you can add this to input element (your value will be rewrited by your max value etc.)

<input type="number" min="0" max="99" 
   onKeyUp="if(this.value>99){this.value='99';}else if(this.value<0){this.value='0';}"
id="yourid">

Then (if you want), you could check if is input really number


... Great, but you don't need min and max anymore dude. (just saying)
@xoxel you do if you want the warning message to still display
for the sake of generalization i'd do onKeyUp="if(this.value>this.max)this.value=this.max;if(this.value<this.min)this.value=this.min;"
This is the best reply, but I suggest to use onChange instead of keyUp as it is too much aggressive while typing.
B
Brad Allred

it's very simple, with some javascript you can simulate a maxlength, check it out:

//maxlength="2"
<input type="number" onKeyDown="if(this.value.length==2) return false;" />

With your solution you can't use backspace once you reach 2 characters. but I miss few thing for a functional solution
Instead of onKeyDownyou should use onKeyPress.
won't work if you highlight the text and press a character (i.e. to replace the content of the input)
validate this if this is not from following keys stackoverflow.com/a/2353562/1534925
problem with keydown is that you can't use backspace at max characters. problem with keypress is that you can copy+paste beyond max characters.
C
Chris Panayotoff

You can specify it as text, but add pettern, that match numbers only:

<input type="text" pattern="\d*" maxlength="2">

It works perfect and also on mobile ( tested on iOS 8 and Android ) pops out the number keyboard.


The pattern attribute is not supported in IE9 and earlier versions, and it has partial support in Safari: caniuse.com/#feat=input-pattern
Yes, thanks for pointing, but we dropped IE9 support ( cutting the mustard from it ), and I prefer it over JS methods. Depends on the project.
A user isn't prevented from entering non-numeric characters with this. They can enter 2 of any char. The pattern only causes validation highlighting.
tested on Android 9 (Nokia 8) but i get the regular keyboard :( any ideas?
佚名

Lets say you wanted the maximum allowed value to be 1000 - either typed or with the spinner.

You restrict the spinner values using: type="number" min="0" max="1000"

and restrict what is typed by the keyboard with javascript: onkeyup="if(parseInt(this.value)>1000){ this.value =1000; return false; }"

<input type="number" min="0" max="1000" onkeyup="if(parseInt(this.value)>1000){ this.value =1000; return false; }">

P
Prasad Shinde

//For Angular I have attached following snippet.

Enter number:

You entered: {{number}}

If you use "onkeypress" event then you will not get any user limitations as such while developing ( unit test it). And if you have requirement that do not allow user to enter after particular limit, take a look of this code and try once.


The problems I see here are: 1. replace with select the text and type does not work if the input has reached 7 numbers 2. increasing the input by 1 when the overflow "boarder" hits does work --> 9999999 and klick the up button. Breaks the limitation
I tried with simple version javascript. If you want you can see using Run code snippet. As such I didnt find any limitation.
Didn't find any limitations either. It stops at 7 digits. I'm using this solution for my code.
There is a limitiation. When you hit the limit, select all and want to replace them it doesn't work. The replacement works for me only when I overwrite the value with the cur one before I return false.
@Insomnia88 ,@edub what if we write function and check necessary conditions...
B
Buttars

Another option is to just add a listener for anything with the maxlength attribute and add the slice value to that. Assuming the user doesn't want to use a function inside every event related to the input. Here's a code snippet. Ignore the CSS and HTML code, the JavaScript is what matters.

// Reusable Function to Enforce MaxLength function enforce_maxlength(event) { var t = event.target; if (t.hasAttribute('maxlength')) { t.value = t.value.slice(0, t.getAttribute('maxlength')); } } // Global Listener for anything with an maxlength attribute. // I put the listener on the body, put it on whatever. document.body.addEventListener('input', enforce_maxlength); label { margin: 10px; font-size: 16px; display: block } input { margin: 0 10px 10px; padding: 5px; font-size: 24px; width: 100px } span { margin: 0 10px 10px; display: block; font-size: 12px; color: #666 } set to 5 maxlength
set to 2 maxlength, min 0 and max 99


N
Neha Jain

Max length will not work with <input type="number" the best way i know is to use oninput event to limit the maxlength. Please see the below code for simple implementation.

<input name="somename"
    oninput="javascript: if (this.value.length > this.maxLength) this.value = this.value.slice(0, this.maxLength);"
    type = "number"
    maxlength = "6"
 />

B
Bharat

Simple solution which will work on,

Input scroll events

Copy paste via keyboard

Copy paste via mouse

Input type etc cases

See there is condition on this.value > 5, just update 5 with your max limit.

Explanation:

If our input number is more then our limit update input value this.value with proper number Math.abs(this.value)

Else just make it to your max limit which is again 5.


t
thdoan

As stated by others, min/max is not the same as maxlength because people could still enter a float that would be larger than the maximum string length that you intended. To truly emulate the maxlength attribute, you can do something like this in a pinch (this is equivalent to maxlength="16"):

<input type="number" oninput="if(value.length>16)value=value.slice(0,16)">

slice will delete characters without end user knowledge when inserted in-between. whereas max-length will block.
@PradeepKumarPrabaharan maxlength is not supported by number inputs. In my example, value.slice(0,16) won't kick in unless the input value is longer than 16 characters.
yes maxlength is not supported for number inputs.. this code is gud but this code doesn't match the maxlength's property exactly..
@TobiasGaertner type="number" takes care of that :).
@10basetom ...depending to the browser... e.g. in FF you can still enter characters and they won't stop after the limit -- but related to the idea of the type number this is an acceptable solution.
k
kayz1

I had this problem before and I solved it using a combination of html5 number type and jQuery.

<input maxlength="2" min="0" max="59" name="minutes" value="0" type="number"/>

script:

$("input[name='minutes']").on('keyup keypress blur change', function(e) {
    //return false if not 0-9
    if (e.which != 8 && e.which != 0 && (e.which < 48 || e.which > 57)) {
       return false;
    }else{
        //limit length but allow backspace so that you can still delete the numbers.
        if( $(this).val().length >= parseInt($(this).attr('maxlength')) && (e.which != 8 && e.which != 0)){
            return false;
        }
    }
});

I don't know if the events are a bit overkill but it solved my problem. JSfiddle


You can easily paste characters in.
T
Tim Wright

Maycow Moura's answer was a good start. However, his solution means that when you enter the second digit all editing of the field stops. So you cannot change values or delete any characters.

The following code stops at 2, but allows editing to continue;

//MaxLength 2
onKeyDown="if(this.value.length==2) this.value = this.value.slice(0, - 1);"

Nope. Try to paste a value.
H
HexboY

a simple way to set maxlength for number inputs is:

<input type="number" onkeypress="return this.value.length < 4;" oninput="if(this.value.length>=4) { this.value = this.value.slice(0,4); }" />

doesn't work on android chrome. onkeypress has some issues with this.
H
Hector

HTML Input

 <input class="minutesInput" type="number" min="10" max="120" value="" />

jQuery

 $(".minutesInput").on('keyup keypress blur change', function(e) {

    if($(this).val() > 120){
      $(this).val('120');
      return false;
    }

  });

I
Ivan Castellanos

Ugh. It's like someone gave up half way through implementing it and thought no one would notice.

For whatever reason, the answers above don't use the min and max attributes. This jQuery finishes it up:

    $('input[type="number"]').on('input change keyup paste', function () {
      if (this.min) this.value = Math.max(parseInt(this.min), parseInt(this.value) || 0);
      if (this.max) this.value = Math.min(parseInt(this.max), parseInt(this.value) || 0);
    });

It would probably also work as a named function "oninput" w/o jQuery if your one of those "jQuery-is-the-devil" types.


it doesn't correctly answer the question, but voted up as it has solved my problem :)
J
Jan Dragsbaek

As with type="number", you specify a max instead of maxlength property, which is the maximum possible number possible. So with 4 digits, max should be 9999, 5 digits 99999 and so on.

Also if you want to make sure it is a positive number, you could set min="0", ensuring positive numbers.


s
shinobi

You can try this as well for numeric input with length restriction

<input type="tel" maxlength="3" />

j
j4r3k
<input type="number" onchange="this.value=Math.max(Math.min(this.value, 100), -100);" />

or if you want to be able enter nothing

<input type="number" onchange="this.value=this.value ? Math.max(Math.min(this.value,100),-100) : null" />

m
markus s

As I found out you cannot use any of onkeydown, onkeypress or onkeyup events for a complete solution including mobile browsers. By the way onkeypress is deprecated and not present anymore in chrome/opera for android (see: UI Events W3C Working Draft, 04 August 2016).

I figured out a solution using the oninput event only. You may have to do additional number checking as required such as negative/positive sign or decimal and thousand separators and the like but as a start the following should suffice:

function checkMaxLength(event) { // Prepare to restore the previous value. if (this.oldValue === undefined) { this.oldValue = this.defaultValue; } if (this.value.length > this.maxLength) { // Set back to the previous value. this.value = oldVal; } else { // Store the previous value. this.oldValue = this.value; // Make additional checks for +/- or ./, etc. // Also consider to combine 'maxlength' // with 'min' and 'max' to prevent wrong submits. } }

I would also recommend to combine maxlength with min and max to prevent wrong submits as stated above several times.


T
Tumwesigye Benjamin
    <input type="number" maxlength="6" oninput="javascript: if (this.value.length > this.maxLength) this.value = this.value.slice(0, this.maxLength);">

This worked for me with no issues


M
Marcel

More relevant attributes to use would be min and max.


P
Philll_t

I know there's an answer already, but if you want your input to behave exactly like the maxlength attribute or as close as you can, use the following code:

(function($) {
 methods = {
    /*
     * addMax will take the applied element and add a javascript behavior
     * that will set the max length
     */
    addMax: function() {
        // set variables
        var
            maxlAttr = $(this).attr("maxlength"),
            maxAttR = $(this).attr("max"),
            x = 0,
            max = "";

        // If the element has maxlength apply the code.
        if (typeof maxlAttr !== typeof undefined && maxlAttr !== false) {

            // create a max equivelant
            if (typeof maxlAttr !== typeof undefined && maxlAttr !== false){
                while (x < maxlAttr) {
                    max += "9";
                    x++;
                }
              maxAttR = max;
            }

            // Permissible Keys that can be used while the input has reached maxlength
            var keys = [
                8, // backspace
                9, // tab
                13, // enter
                46, // delete
                37, 39, 38, 40 // arrow keys<^>v
            ]

            // Apply changes to element
            $(this)
                .attr("max", maxAttR) //add existing max or new max
                .keydown(function(event) {
                    // restrict key press on length reached unless key being used is in keys array or there is highlighted text
                    if ($(this).val().length == maxlAttr && $.inArray(event.which, keys) == -1 && methods.isTextSelected() == false) return false;
                });;
        }
    },
    /*
     * isTextSelected returns true if there is a selection on the page. 
     * This is so that if the user selects text and then presses a number
     * it will behave as normal by replacing the selection with the value
     * of the key pressed.
     */
    isTextSelected: function() {
       // set text variable
        text = "";
        if (window.getSelection) {
            text = window.getSelection().toString();
        } else if (document.selection && document.selection.type != "Control") {
            text = document.selection.createRange().text;
        }
        return (text.length > 0);
    }
};

$.maxlengthNumber = function(){
     // Get all number inputs that have maxlength
     methods.addMax.call($("input[type=number]"));
 }

})($)

// Apply it:
$.maxlengthNumber();

@Phill_t maybe you can enlighten me? I used your code and it is working well in principal BUT "$(this).attr("maxlength")" always delivers 2. AND why would it be better to use "$(this).attr("maxlength")" if it was working instead of just "this.maxlength" which I tested and was working as expected and is shorter and imho also clearer to read? Did I miss anything?
What do you mean "delivers 2"?
Phill_t my apologies. "this.maxLength" is only working in the scope of the keydown function. In the function "addMax" "this" is the document rather than the expected element and therefore has different attribute values. How would I get access to the number input instead? Is the above code really working on your side? I tested with Chrome/Opera/Vivaldi, Firefox, Edge, IE and Safari and had the same results for each browser. Okay, in Edge maxlegth="1" and maxlength="2" where indeed working but "$(this).attr("maxlength")" don't increase further for any higher number!!? @anybody: Any suggestions?
As I said it always is two because it is called on the document rather than on the element in question as I found out when I was debugging it. By the way you may also want to look at my solution which I figured out after studying yours: stackoverflow.com/a/41871960/1312012
C
CsZsombor

I use a simple solution for all inputs (with jQuery):

$(document).on('input', ':input[type="number"][maxlength]', function () {
    if (this.value.length > this.maxLength) {
        this.value = this.value.slice(0, this.maxLength); 
    }
});

The code select all input type="number" element where maxlength has defined.


M
Mauricio Gracia Gutierrez

Since I was look to validate and only allow integers I took one the existing answers and improve it

The idea is to validate from 1 to 12, if the input is lower than 1 it will be set to 1, if the input is higher than 12 it will be set to 12. Decimal simbols are not allowed.

<input id="horaReserva" type="number" min="1" max="12" onkeypress="return isIntegerInput(event)" oninput="maxLengthCheck(this)">

function maxLengthCheck(object) {
    if (object.value.trim() == "") {

    }
    else if (parseInt(object.value) > parseInt(object.max)) {
        object.value = object.max ;
    }
    else if (parseInt(object.value) < parseInt(object.min)) {
        object.value = object.min ;
    }
}

function isIntegerInput (evt) {
    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();
        }
    }
}

D
Dremiq

If anyone is struggling with this in React the easiest solution that i found to this is using the onChange function like this:

    const [amount, setAmount] = useState("");
    
   return(
    <input onChange={(e) => {
    setAmount(e.target.value);
    if (e.target.value.length > 4) {
         setAmount(e.target.value.slice(0, 4));
    }
    }} value={amount}/>)

So what this basically does is it takes the value of the input and if the input value length is bigger than 4 it slices all the numbers after it so you only get the first 4 numbers (of course you can change the amount of numbers you can type by changing all 4's in the code). I hope this helps to anyone who is struggling with this issue. Also if you wanna learn what the slice method does you can check it out here


S
Simon Berton

This might help someone.

With a little of javascript you can search for all datetime-local inputs, search if the year the user is trying to input, greater that 100 years in the future:

$('input[type=datetime-local]').each(function( index ) {

    $(this).change(function() {
      var today = new Date();
      var date = new Date(this.value);
      var yearFuture = new Date();
      yearFuture.setFullYear(yearFuture.getFullYear()+100);

      if(date.getFullYear() > yearFuture.getFullYear()) {

        this.value = today.getFullYear() + this.value.slice(4);
      }
    })
  });

F
Félix Maroy

Here's the simplest solution to use the maxlength:

<form>
   <input class="form-control" id="code_pin" oninput="if (this.value.length > this.maxLength) this.value = this.value.slice(0, this.maxLength);" type="number" maxlength="4">
</form>