I got:
$(someTex开发者_如何转开发tInputField).keypress(function() {
alert($(this).val());
});
Now the alert always returns the value BEFORE the keypress
(e.g. the field is empty, I type 'a' and the alert gives me ''. Then I type 'b' and the alert gives me 'a'...). But I want the value AFTER the keypress
- how can I do that?
Background: I'd like to enable a button as soon as the text field contains at least one character. So I run this test on every keypress
event, but using the returned val()
the result is always one step behind. Using the change()
event is not an option for me because then the button is disabled until you leave the text box. If there's a better way to do that, I'm glad to hear it!
Change keypress
to keyup
:
$(someTextInputField).on("keyup", function() {
alert($(this).val());
});
keypress
is fired when the key is pressed down, keyup
is fired when the key is released.
Surprised that no one mentioned the js "input" event:
$(someTextInputField).on('input', function() {
alert($(this).val());
});
Recommended.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Events/input
instead of keypress, use keyup.
Alternatively, you can use the keydown event with a timeout of 0.
That way, the changes will be applied instantly, instead of being applied when the user stops holding the key.
$(someTextInputField).on("keydown", function() {
setTimeout(function($elem){
alert($elem.val());
}, 0, $(this));
});
Try something like this:
$('#someField').keypress(function() {
setTimeout(function() {
if ($('#someField').val().length > 0)
$('#theButton').attr('disabled', false);
}, 1);
});
That simply introduces a timeout so that after the "keypress" event loop completes, your code will run almost immediately thereafter. Such a short timer interval (even if rounded up by the browser) will not be noticeable.
edit — or you could use "keyup" like everybody else says, though its semantics are different.
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