I want to get only positive values, is there any way to prevent it using only html Please don't suggest validation method
https://i.stack.imgur.com/XiUmS.png
Use the min
attribute like this:
<input type="number" min="0">
For me the solution was:
Edit
As suggested on the comments with a minor change to work if 0 is the min value.
<input ng-model="row.myValue" type="{{row.code == 1 ? 'text' : 'number'}}" min="0" ng-pattern="..." noformvalidate oninput="if (this.type=='text') this.value=Math.abs(this.value) ">
this.value = Math.abs(this.value) > 0 ? Math.abs(this.value) : null
I was not satisfied with @Abhrabm answer because:
It was only preventing negative numbers from being entered from up/down arrows, whereas user can type negative number from keyboard.
Solution is to prevent with key code:
// Select your input element. var number = document.getElementById('number'); // Listen for input event on numInput. number.onkeydown = function(e) { if(!((e.keyCode > 95 && e.keyCode < 106) || (e.keyCode > 47 && e.keyCode < 58) || e.keyCode == 8)) { return false; } }
Clarification provided by @Hugh Guiney:
What key codes are being checked:
95, < 106 corresponds to Numpad 0 through 9;
47, < 58 corresponds to 0 through 9 on the Number Row; and 8 is Backspace.
So this script is preventing invalid key from being entered in input.
min="0"
.
|| (e.keyCode>36 && e.keyCode<41)
This does not allow user to increase/decrease number through up/down arrow and go right/left to edit number.
This code is working fine for me. Can you please check:
<input type="number" name="test" min="0" oninput="validity.valid||(value='');">
-
is not really a good idea.
<input type="number" name="test" min="0" oninput="validity.valid||(value=value.replace(/\D+/g, ''))">
- this will remove all non-digit symbols
min="0"
so there are no nagatives. If you want to negative value then remove this attribute.
Easy method:
I wanted to allow decimal numbers and not clear the entire input if a negative was inputted. This works well in chrome at least:
<input type="number" min="0" onkeypress="return event.charCode != 45">
keypress
is the only way one could enter a negative number into an input...
The @Manwal answer is good, but i like code with less lines of code for better readability. Also i like to use onclick/onkeypress usage in html instead.
My suggested solution does the same: Add
min="0" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event)"
to the html input and
function isNumberKey(evt){
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : event.keyCode;
return !(charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57));
}
as a javascript function.
As said, it does the same. It's just personal preference on how to solve the problem.
Here's an angular 2 solution:
create a class OnlyNumber
import {Directive, ElementRef, HostListener} from '@angular/core';
@Directive({
selector: '[OnlyNumber]'
})
export class OnlyNumber {
// Allow decimal numbers. The \. is only allowed once to occur
private regex: RegExp = new RegExp(/^[0-9]+(\.[0-9]*){0,1}$/g);
// Allow key codes for special events. Reflect :
// Backspace, tab, end, home
private specialKeys: Array<string> = ['Backspace', 'Tab', 'End', 'Home'];
constructor(private el: ElementRef) {
}
@HostListener('keydown', ['$event'])
onKeyDown(event: KeyboardEvent) {
// Allow Backspace, tab, end, and home keys
if (this.specialKeys.indexOf(event.key) !== -1) {
return;
}
// Do not use event.keycode this is deprecated.
// See: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/KeyboardEvent/keyCode
let current: string = this.el.nativeElement.value;
// We need this because the current value on the DOM element
// is not yet updated with the value from this event
let next: string = current.concat(event.key);
if (next && !String(next).match(this.regex)) {
event.preventDefault();
}
}
}
add OnlyNumber to declarations in app.module.ts and use like it like this anywhere in your app
<input OnlyNumber="true">
Just for reference: with jQuery you can overwrite negative values on focusout with the following code:
$(document).ready(function(){
$("body").delegate('#myInputNumber', 'focusout', function(){
if($(this).val() < 0){
$(this).val('0');
}
});
});
This does not replace server side validation!
Restrict the charcter (-) & (e) in type Number
<input type="number" onkeydown="return event.keyCode !== 69 && event.keyCode !== 189" />
Demo: https://stackblitz.com/edit/typescript-cwc9ge?file=index.ts
simply use min="0"
oninput="this.value=(this.value < Number(this.min) || this.value > Number(this.max)) ? '' : this.value;"
Just adding another way of doing this (using Angular) if you don't wanna dirt the HTML with even more code:
You only have to subscribe to the field valueChanges and set the Value as an absolute value (taking care of not emitting a new event because that will cause another valueChange hence a recursive call and trigger a Maximum call size exceeded error)
HTML CODE
<form [formGroup]="myForm">
<input type="number" formControlName="myInput"/>
</form>
TypeScript CODE (Inside your Component)
formGroup: FormGroup;
ngOnInit() {
this.myInput.valueChanges
.subscribe(() => {
this.myInput.setValue(Math.abs(this.myInput.value), {emitEvent: false});
});
}
get myInput(): AbstractControl {
return this.myForm.controls['myInput'];
}
The answer to this is not helpful. as its only works when you use up/down keys, but if you type -11 it will not work. So here is a small fix that I use
this one for integers
$(".integer").live("keypress keyup", function (event) {
// console.log('int = '+$(this).val());
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^\d].+/, ""));
if (event.which != 8 && (event.which < 48 || event.which > 57))
{
event.preventDefault();
}
});
this one when you have numbers of price
$(".numeric, .price").live("keypress keyup", function (event) {
// console.log('numeric = '+$(this).val());
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^0-9\,\.]/g, ''));
if (event.which != 8 && (event.which != 44 || $(this).val().indexOf(',') != -1) && (event.which < 48 || event.which > 57)) {
event.preventDefault();
}
});
This solution allows all keyboard functionality including copy paste with keyboard. It prevents pasting of negative numbers with the mouse. It works with all browsers and the demo on codepen uses bootstrap and jQuery. This should work with non english language settings and keyboards. If the browser doesn't support the paste event capture (IE), it will remove the negative sign after focus out. This solution behaves as the native browser should with min=0 type=number.
Markup:
<form>
<input class="form-control positive-numeric-only" id="id-blah1" min="0" name="nm1" type="number" value="0" />
<input class="form-control positive-numeric-only" id="id-blah2" min="0" name="nm2" type="number" value="0" />
</form>
Javascript
$(document).ready(function() {
$("input.positive-numeric-only").on("keydown", function(e) {
var char = e.originalEvent.key.replace(/[^0-9^.^,]/, "");
if (char.length == 0 && !(e.originalEvent.ctrlKey || e.originalEvent.metaKey)) {
e.preventDefault();
}
});
$("input.positive-numeric-only").bind("paste", function(e) {
var numbers = e.originalEvent.clipboardData
.getData("text")
.replace(/[^0-9^.^,]/g, "");
e.preventDefault();
var the_val = parseFloat(numbers);
if (the_val > 0) {
$(this).val(the_val.toFixed(2));
}
});
$("input.positive-numeric-only").focusout(function(e) {
if (!isNaN(this.value) && this.value.length != 0) {
this.value = Math.abs(parseFloat(this.value)).toFixed(2);
} else {
this.value = 0;
}
});
});
Here is a solution that worked best of me for a QTY field that only allows numbers.
// Only allow numbers, backspace and left/right direction on QTY input
if(!((e.keyCode > 95 && e.keyCode < 106) // numpad numbers
|| (e.keyCode > 47 && e.keyCode < 58) // numbers
|| [8, 9, 35, 36, 37, 39].indexOf(e.keyCode) >= 0 // backspace, tab, home, end, left arrow, right arrow
|| (e.keyCode == 65 && (e.ctrlKey === true || e.metaKey === true)) // Ctrl/Cmd + A
|| (e.keyCode == 67 && (e.ctrlKey === true || e.metaKey === true)) // Ctrl/Cmd + C
|| (e.keyCode == 88 && (e.ctrlKey === true || e.metaKey === true)) // Ctrl/Cmd + X
|| (e.keyCode == 86 && (e.ctrlKey === true || e.metaKey === true)) // Ctrl/Cmd + V
)) {
return false;
}
If Number is Negative or Positive Using ES6’s Math.Sign const num = -8; // Old Way num === 0 ? num : (num > 0 ? 1 : -1); // -1 // ES6 Way Math.sign(num); // -1
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