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Text

A text input field on an HTML form. The user can enter a word, phrase, or series of numbers in a text field.

Client-side object

Implemented in

Navigator 2.0
Navigator 3.0: added type property.
Navigator 4.0: added handleEvent method.

Created by

The HTML INPUT tag, with "text" as the value of the TYPE attribute. For a given form, the JavaScript runtime engine creates appropriate Text objects and puts these objects in the elements array of the corresponding Form object. You access a Text object by indexing this array. You can index the array either by number or, if supplied, by using the value of the NAME attribute.

To define a Text object, use standard HTML syntax with the addition of JavaScript event handlers.

Event handlers

Description

A Text object on a form looks as follows:

A Text object is a form element and must be defined within a FORM tag.

Text objects can be updated (redrawn) dynamically by setting the value property (this.value).

Property Summary

defaultValue
Reflects the VALUE attribute.

form
Specifies the form containing the Text object.

name
Reflects the NAME attribute.

type
Reflects the TYPE attribute.

value
Reflects the current value of the Text object's field.

Method Summary

blur
Removes focus from the object.

focus
Gives focus to the object.

handleEvent
Invokes the handler for the specified event.

select
Selects the input area of the object.

Examples

Example 1. The following example creates a Text object that is 25 characters long. The text field appears immediately to the right of the words "Last name:". The text field is blank when the form loads.

<B>Last name:</B> <INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="last_name" VALUE="" SIZE=25>
Example 2. The following example creates two Text objects on a form. Each object has a default value. The city object has an onFocus event handler that selects all the text in the field when the user tabs to that field. The state object has an onChange event handler that forces the value to uppercase.

<FORM NAME="form1">
<BR><B>City: </B><INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="city" VALUE="Anchorage"
   SIZE="20" onFocus="this.select()">
<B>State: </B><INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="state" VALUE="AK" SIZE="2"
   onChange="this.value=this.value.toUpperCase()">
</FORM>
See also the examples for the onBlur, onChange, onFocus, and onSelect.

See also

Text, Form, Password, String, Textarea

Properties

defaultValue

A string indicating the default value of a Text object.

Property of

Text

Implemented in

Navigator 2.0

Security

Navigator 3.0: This property is tainted by default. For information on data tainting, see "JavaScript Security".

Description

The initial value of defaultValue reflects the value of the VALUE attribute. Setting defaultValue programmatically overrides the initial setting.

You can set the defaultValue property at any time. The display of the related object does not update when you set the defaultValue property, only when you set the value property.

Examples

The following function evaluates the defaultValue property of objects on the surfCity form and displays the values in the msgWindow window:

function defaultGetter() {
   msgWindow=window.open("")
   msgWindow.document.write("hidden.defaultValue is " +
      document.surfCity.hiddenObj.defaultValue + "<BR>")
   msgWindow.document.write("password.defaultValue is " +
      document.surfCity.passwordObj.defaultValue + "<BR>")
   msgWindow.document.write("text.defaultValue is " +
      document.surfCity.textObj.defaultValue + "<BR>")
   msgWindow.document.write("textarea.defaultValue is " +
      document.surfCity.textareaObj.defaultValue + "<BR>")
   msgWindow.document.close()
}

See also

Text.value

form

An object reference specifying the form containing this object.

Property of

Text

Read-only

Implemented in

Navigator 2.0

Description

Each form element has a form property that is a reference to the element's parent form. This property is especially useful in event handlers, where you might need to refer to another element on the current form.

Examples

Example 1. In the following example, the form myForm contains a Text object and a button. When the user clicks the button, the value of the Text object is set to the form's name. The button's onClick event handler uses this.form to refer to the parent form, myForm.

<FORM NAME="myForm">
Form name:<INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="text1" VALUE="Beluga">
<P>
<INPUT NAME="button1" TYPE="button" VALUE="Show Form Name"
   onClick="this.form.text1.value=this.form.name">
</FORM>
Example 2. The following example shows a form with several elements. When the user clicks button2, the function showElements displays an alert dialog box containing the names of each element on the form myForm.

function showElements(theForm) {
   str = "Form Elements of form " + theForm.name + ": \n "
   for (i = 0; i < theForm.length; i++)
      str += theForm.elements[i].name + "\n"
   alert(str)
}
</script>
<FORM NAME="myForm">
Form name:<INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="text1" VALUE="Beluga">
<P>
<INPUT NAME="button1" TYPE="button" VALUE="Show Form Name"
   onClick="this.form.text1.value=this.form.name">
<INPUT NAME="button2" TYPE="button" VALUE="Show Form Elements"
   onClick="showElements(this.form)">
</FORM>
The alert dialog box displays the following text:

JavaScript Alert:
Form Elements of form myForm:
text1
button1
button2
Example 3. The following example uses an object reference, rather than the this keyword, to refer to a form. The code returns a reference to myForm, which is a form containing myTextObject.

document.myForm.myTextObject.form

See also

Form

name

A string specifying the name of this object.

Property of

Text

Implemented in

Navigator 2.0

Security

Navigator 3.0: This property is tainted by default. For information on data tainting, see "JavaScript Security".

Description

The name property initially reflects the value of the NAME attribute. Changing the name property overrides this setting. The name property is not displayed on-screen; it is used to refer to the objects programmatically.

If multiple objects on the same form have the same NAME attribute, an array of the given name is created automatically. Each element in the array represents an individual Form object. Elements are indexed in source order starting at 0. For example, if two Text elements and a Textarea element on the same form have their NAME attribute set to "myField", an array with the elements myField[0], myField[1], and myField[2] is created. You need to be aware of this situation in your code and know whether myField refers to a single element or to an array of elements.

Examples

In the following example, the valueGetter function uses a for loop to iterate over the array of elements on the valueTest form. The msgWindow window displays the names of all the elements on the form:

newWindow=window.open("http://home.netscape.com")
function valueGetter() {
   var msgWindow=window.open("")
   for (var i = 0; i < newWindow.document.valueTest.elements.length; i++) {
      msgWindow.document.write(newWindow.document.valueTest.elements[i].name + "<BR>")
   }
}

type

For all Text objects, the value of the type property is "text". This property specifies the form element's type.

Property of

Text

Read-only

Implemented in

Navigator 3.0

Examples

The following example writes the value of the type property for every element on a form.

for (var i = 0; i < document.form1.elements.length; i++) {
   document.writeln("<BR>type is " + document.form1.elements[i].type)
}

value

A string that reflects the VALUE attribute of the object.

Property of

Text

Implemented in

Navigator 2.0

Security

Navigator 3.0: This property is tainted by default. For information on data tainting, see "JavaScript Security".

Description

The value property is a string that initially reflects the VALUE attribute. This string is displayed in the text field. The value of this property changes when a user or a program modifies the field.

You can set the value property at any time. The display of the Text object updates immediately when you set the value property.

Examples

The following function evaluates the value property of a group of buttons and displays it in the msgWindow window:

function valueGetter() {
   var msgWindow=window.open("")
   msgWindow.document.write("submitButton.value is " +
      document.valueTest.submitButton.value + "<BR>")
   msgWindow.document.write("resetButton.value is " +
      document.valueTest.resetButton.value + "<BR>")
   msgWindow.document.write("myText.value is " +
      document.valueTest.myText.value + "<BR>")
   msgWindow.document.close()
}
This example displays the following:

submitButton.value is Query Submit
resetButton.value is Reset
myText.value is Stonefish are dangerous.
The previous example assumes the buttons have been defined as follows:

<INPUT TYPE="submit" NAME="submitButton">
<INPUT TYPE="reset" NAME="resetButton">
<INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="myText" VALUE="Stonefish are dangerous.">

See also

Text.defaultValue

Methods

blur

Removes focus from the text field.

Method of

Text

Implemented in

Navigator 2.0

Syntax

blur()

Parameters

None

Examples

The following example removes focus from the text element userText:

userText.blur()
This example assumes that the text element is defined as

<INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="userText">

See also

Text.focus, Text.select

focus

Navigates to the text field and gives it focus.

Method of

Text

Implemented in

Navigator 2.0

Syntax

focus()

Parameters

None

Description

Use the focus method to navigate to a text field and give it focus. You can then either programmatically enter a value in the field or let the user enter a value. If you use this method without the select method, the cursor is positioned at the beginning of the field.

Example

See example for select.

See also

Text.blur, Text.select

handleEvent

Invokes the handler for the specified event.

Method of

Text

Implemented in

Navigator 4.0

Syntax

handleEvent(event)

Parameters

event
The name of an event for which the specified object has an event handler.

select

Selects the input area of the text field.

Method of

Text

Implemented in

Navigator 2.0

Syntax

select()

Parameters

None

Description

Use the select method to highlight the input area of a text field. You can use the select method with the focus method to highlight a field and position the cursor for a user response. This makes it easy for the user to replace all the text in the field.

Example

The following example uses an onClick event handler to move the focus to a text field and select that field for changing:

<FORM NAME="myForm">
<B>Last name: </B><INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="lastName" SIZE=20 VALUE="Pigman">
<BR><B>First name: </B><INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="firstName" SIZE=20 VALUE="Victoria">
<BR><BR>
<INPUT TYPE="button" VALUE="Change last name"
   onClick="this.form.lastName.select();this.form.lastName.focus();">
</FORM>

See also

Text.blur, Text.focus


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Last Updated: 10/31/97 12:32:00


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