Copyright (c) 2010 - 2018 Robin Herbots Licensed under the MIT license (http://opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php)
Inputmask is a javascript library which creates an input mask. Inputmask can run against vanilla javascript, jQuery and jqlite.
An inputmask helps the user with the input by ensuring a predefined format. This can be useful for dates, numerics, phone numbers, ...
Highlights:
- easy to use
- optional parts anywere in the mask
- possibility to define aliases which hide complexity
- date / datetime masks
- numeric masks
- lots of callbacks
- non-greedy masks
- many features can be enabled/disabled/configured by options
- supports readonly/disabled/dir="rtl" attributes
- support data-inputmask attribute(s)
- alternator-mask
- regex-mask
- dynamic-mask
- preprocessing-mask
- JIT-masking
- value formatting / validating without input element
- AMD/CommonJS support
- dependencyLibs: vanilla javascript, jQuery, jqlite
- Android support
Demo page see http://robinherbots.github.io/Inputmask
Thanks to Jetbrains for providing a free license for their excellent Webstorm IDE.
Inputmask can run against different javascript libraries. You can choose between:
- inputmask.dependencyLib (vanilla)
- inputmask.dependencyLib.jquery
- inputmask.dependencyLib.jqlite
- .... (others are welcome)
Warning: Using any dependency library that relies on the CustomEvent
object or the document.createEvent
DOM API will have issues with updating values in disabled inputs, in Firefox 64 and older. This is caused by an old Firefox bug, that has been fixed in Firefox 65. Currently, this means that inputmask.dependencyLib
and inputmask.dependencyLib.jqlite
are affected by this bug. See #2045 for more details.
Include the js-files which you can find in the dist
folder.
If you want to include the Inputmask and all extensions. (with jQuery as dependencylib)
<script src="jquery.js"></script>
<script src="dist/jquery.inputmask.bundle.js"></script>
For individual extensions. (with jQuery as dependencylib)
<script src="jquery.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/inputmask.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/inputmask.extensions.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/inputmask.numeric.extensions.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/inputmask.date.extensions.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/jquery.inputmask.js"></script>
For individual extensions. (with vanilla dependencylib)
<script src="dist/inputmask/dependencyLibs/inputmask.dependencyLib.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/inputmask.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/inputmask.extensions.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/inputmask.numeric.extensions.js"></script>
<script src="dist/inputmask/inputmask.date.extensions.js"></script>
If you like to automatically bind the inputmask to the inputs marked with the data-inputmask- ... attributes you may also want to include the inputmask.binding.js
<script src="dist/inputmask/bindings/inputmask.binding.js"></script>
npm install inputmask --save
npm install inputmask@next --save
If you want to include the Inputmask and all extensions.
var Inputmask = require('inputmask');
//es6
import Inputmask from "inputmask";
For individual extensions. Every extension exports the Inputmask, so you only need to import the extensions. See example.
require("inputmask/dist/inputmask/inputmask.numeric.extensions");
var Inputmask = require("inputmask/dist/inputmask/inputmask.date.extensions");
//es6
import "inputmask/dist/inputmask/inputmask.numeric.extensions";
import Inputmask from "inputmask/dist/inputmask/inputmask.date.extensions";
By default the vanilla dependencyLib is used. You can select another dependency by creating an alias in the webpack.config.
resolve: {
alias: {
"./dependencyLibs/inputmask.dependencyLib": "./dependencyLibs/inputmask.dependencyLib.jquery"
}
},
var selector = document.getElementById("selector");
var im = new Inputmask("99-9999999");
im.mask(selector);
//or
Inputmask({"mask": "(999) 999-9999", .... other options .....}).mask(selector);
Inputmask("9-a{1,3}9{1,3}").mask(selector);
Inputmask("9", { repeat: 10 }).mask(selector);
Inputmask({ regex: "\\d*" }).mask(selector);
Inputmask({ regex: String.raw`\d*` }).mask(selector);
$(document).ready(function(){
$(selector).inputmask("99-9999999"); //static mask
$(selector).inputmask({"mask": "(999) 999-9999"}); //specifying options
$(selector).inputmask("9-a{1,3}9{1,3}"); //mask with dynamic syntax
});
<input data-inputmask="'alias': 'datetime'" />
<input data-inputmask="'mask': '9', 'repeat': 10, 'greedy' : false" />
<input data-inputmask="'mask': '99-9999999'" />
$(document).ready(function(){
$(":input").inputmask();
or
Inputmask().mask(document.querySelectorAll("input"));
});
Any option can also be passed through the use of a data attribute. Use data-inputmask-<the name of the option>="value"
<input id="example1" data-inputmask-clearmaskonlostfocus="false" />
<input id="example2" data-inputmask-regex="[a-za-zA-Z0-9!#$%&'*+/=?^_`{|}~-]+(?:\.[a-zA-Z0-9!#$%&'*+/=?^_`{|}~-]+)*@(?:[a-zA-Z0-9](?:[a-zA-Z0-9-]*[a-zA-Z0-9])?\.)+[a-zA-Z0-9](?:[a-zA-Z0-9-]*[a-zA-Z0-9])?" />
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#example1").inputmask("99-9999999");
$("#example2").inputmask();
});
<input type="text">
<input type="search">
<input type="tel">
<input type="password">
<div contenteditable="true">
(and all others supported by contenteditable)<textarea>
- any html-element (mask text content or set maskedvalue with jQuery.val)
The allowed input types are defined in the supportsInputType option. Also see (input-type-ref)
9
: numerica
: alphabetical*
: alphanumeric
There are more definitions defined within the extensions.
You can find info within the js-files or by further exploring the options.
These are the very basic of masking. The mask is defined and will not change during the input.
$(document).ready(function(){
$(selector).inputmask("aa-9999"); //static mask
$(selector).inputmask({mask: "aa-9999"}); //static mask
});
It is possible to define some parts in the mask as optional. This is done by using [ ].
Example:
$('#test').inputmask('(99) 9999[9]-9999');
This mask wil allow input like (99) 99999-9999
or (99) 9999-9999
.
Input => 12123451234 mask => (12) 12345-1234 (trigger complete)
Input => 121234-1234 mask => (12) 1234-1234 (trigger complete)
Input => 1212341234 mask => (12) 12341-234_ (trigger incomplete)
As an extra there is another configurable character which is used to skip an optional part in the mask.
skipOptionalPartCharacter: " "
Input => 121234 1234 mask => (12) 1234-1234 (trigger complete)
When clearMaskOnLostFocus: true
is set in the options (default), the mask will clear out the optional part when it is not filled in and this only in case the optional part is at the end of the mask.
For example, given:
$('#test').inputmask('999[-AAA]');
While the field has focus and is blank, users will see the full mask ___-___
. When the required part of the mask is filled and the field loses focus, the user will see 123
. When both the required and optional parts of the mask are filled out and the field loses focus, the user will see 123-ABC
.
When defining an optional mask together with the greedy: false option, the inputmask will show the smallest possible mask as input first.
$(selector).inputmask({ mask: "9[-9999]", greedy: false });
The initial mask shown will be "_" instead of "_-____".
Dynamic masks can change during the input. To define a dynamic part use { }.
{n} => n repeats {n|j} => n repeats, with j jitmasking {n,m} => from n to m repeats {n,m|j} => from n to m repeats, with j jitmasking
Also {+} and {*} is allowed. + start from 1 and * start from 0.
$(document).ready(function(){
$(selector).inputmask("aa-9{4}"); //static mask with dynamic syntax
$(selector).inputmask("aa-9{1,4}"); //dynamic mask ~ the 9 def can be occur 1 to 4 times
//email mask
$(selector).inputmask({
mask: "*{1,20}[.*{1,20}][.*{1,20}][.*{1,20}]@*{1,20}[.*{2,6}][.*{1,2}]",
greedy: false,
onBeforePaste: function (pastedValue, opts) {
pastedValue = pastedValue.toLowerCase();
return pastedValue.replace("mailto:", "");
},
definitions: {
'*': {
validator: "[0-9A-Za-z!#$%&'*+/=?^_`{|}~\-]",
casing: "lower"
}
}
});
//decimal mask
Inputmask("(.999){+|1},00", {
positionCaretOnClick: "radixFocus",
radixPoint: ",",
_radixDance: true,
numericInput: true,
placeholder: "0",
definitions: {
"0": {
validator: "[0-9\uFF11-\uFF19]"
}
}
}).mask(selector);
});
The alternator syntax is like an OR statement. The mask can be one of the 3 choices specified in the alternator.
To define an alternator use the |. ex: "a|9" => a or 9 "(aaa)|(999)" => aaa or 999 "(aaa|999|9AA)" => aaa or 999 or 9AA
Also make sure to read about the keepStatic option.
$("selector").inputmask("(99.9)|(X)", {
definitions: {
"X": {
validator: "[xX]",
casing: "upper"
}
}
});
or
$("selector").inputmask({
mask: ["99.9", "X"],
definitions: {
"X": {
validator: "[xX]",
casing: "upper"
}
}
});
You can define the mask as a function which can allow to preprocess the resulting mask. Example sorting for multiple masks or retrieving mask definitions dynamically through ajax. The preprocessing fn should return a valid mask definition.
$(selector).inputmask({ mask: function () { /* do stuff */ return ["[1-]AAA-999", "[1-]999-AAA"]; }});
Just in time masking. With the jitMasking option you can enable jit masking. The mask will only be visible for the user entered characters. Default: false
Value can be true or a threshold number or false.
Inputmask("datetime", { jitMasking: true }).mask(selector);
You can define your own definitions to use in your mask.
Start by choosing a masksymbol.
Next define your validator. The validator can be a regular expression or a function.
The return value of a validator can be true, false or a command object.
-
pos : position to insert
-
c : character to insert
-
caret : position of the caret
-
remove : position(s) to remove
- pos or [pos1, pos2]
-
insert : position(s) to add :
- { pos : position to insert, c : character to insert }
- [{ pos : position to insert, c : character to insert }, { ...}, ... ]
-
refreshFromBuffer :
- true => refresh validPositions from the complete buffer
- { start: , end: } => refresh from start to end
When you insert or delete characters, they are only shifted when the definition type is the same. This behavior can be overridden by giving a definitionSymbol. (see example x, y, z, which can be used for ip-address masking, the validation is different, but it is allowed to shift the characters between the definitions)
Inputmask.extendDefinitions({
'f': { //masksymbol
"validator": "[0-9\(\)\.\+/ ]"
},
'g': {
"validator": function (chrs, buffer, pos, strict, opts) {
//do some logic and return true, false, or { "pos": new position, "c": character to place }
}
},
'j': { //basic year
validator: "(19|20)\\d{2}"
},
'x': {
validator: "[0-2]",
definitionSymbol: "i" //this allows shifting values from other definitions, with the same masksymbol or definitionSymbol
},
'y': {
validator: function (chrs, buffer, pos, strict, opts) {
var valExp2 = new RegExp("2[0-5]|[01][0-9]");
return valExp2.test(buffer[pos - 1] + chrs);
},
definitionSymbol: "i"
},
'z': {
validator: function (chrs, buffer, pos, strict, opts) {
var valExp3 = new RegExp("25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|[01][0-9][0-9]");
return valExp3.test(buffer[pos - 2] + buffer[pos - 1] + chrs);
},
definitionSymbol: "i"
}
});
Specify a placeholder for a definition. This can also be a function.
Defaults can be set as below.
Inputmask.extendDefaults({
'autoUnmask': true
});
Inputmask.extendDefinitions({
'A': {
validator: "[A-Za-z\u0410-\u044F\u0401\u0451\u00C0-\u00FF\u00B5]",
casing: "upper" //auto uppercasing
},
'+': {
validator: "[0-9A-Za-z\u0410-\u044F\u0401\u0451\u00C0-\u00FF\u00B5]",
casing: "upper"
}
});
Inputmask.extendAliases({
'numeric': {
mask: "r",
greedy: false,
...
}
});
But if the property is defined within an alias you need to set it for the alias definition. This is also for default plugin options. If the alias definitions extends on default options, you can only override it at alias level.
Inputmask.extendAliases({
'numeric': {
autoUnmask: true,
allowPlus: false,
allowMinus: false
}
});
However, the preferred way to alter properties for an alias is by creating a new alias which inherits from the default alias definition.
Inputmask.extendAliases({
'myNum': {
alias: "numeric",
placeholder: '',
allowPlus: false,
allowMinus: false
}
});
Once defined, you can call the alias by:
Inputmask("myNum").mask(selector);
All callbacks are implemented as options. This means that you can set general implementations for the callbacks by setting a default.
Inputmask.extendDefaults({
onKeyValidation: function(key, result){
if (!result){
alert('Your input is not valid')
}
}
});
Create a mask for the input.
$(selector).inputmask({ mask: "99-999-99"});
or
Inputmask({ mask: "99-999-99"}).mask(document.querySelectorAll(selector));
or
Inputmask("99-999-99").mask(document.querySelectorAll(selector));
or
var im = new Inputmask("99-999-99");
im.mask(document.querySelectorAll(selector));
or
Inputmask("99-999-99").mask(selector);
Get the unmaskedvalue
$(selector).inputmask('unmaskedvalue');
or
var input = document.getElementById(selector);
if (input.inputmask)
input.inputmask.unmaskedvalue()
Unmask a given value against the mask.
var unformattedDate = Inputmask.unmask("23/03/1973", { alias: "dd/mm/yyyy"}); //23031973
Remove the inputmask
.
$(selector).inputmask('remove');
or
var input = document.getElementById(selector);
if (input.inputmask)
input.inputmask.remove()
or
Inputmask.remove(document.getElementById(selector));
return the default (empty) mask value
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#test").inputmask("999-AAA");
var initialValue = $("#test").inputmask("getemptymask"); // initialValue => "___-___"
});
Check whether the returned value is masked or not; currently only works reliably when using jquery.val fn to retrieve the value
$(document).ready(function(){
function validateMaskedValue(val){}
function validateValue(val){}
var val = $("#test").val();
if ($("#test").inputmask("hasMaskedValue"))
validateMaskedValue(val);
else
validateValue(val);
});
Verify whether the current value is complete or not.
$(document).ready(function(){
if ($(selector).inputmask("isComplete")){
//do something
}
});
The metadata of the actual mask provided in the mask definitions can be obtained by calling getmetadata. If only a mask is provided the mask definition will be returned by the getmetadata.
$(selector).inputmask("getmetadata");
The setvalue functionality is to set a value to the inputmask like you would do with jQuery.val, BUT it will trigger the internal event used by the inputmask always, whatever the case. This is particular usefull when cloning an inputmask with jQuery.clone. Cloning an inputmask is not a fully functional clone. On the first event (mouseenter, focus, ...) the inputmask can detect if it where cloned and can reactivate the masking. However when setting the value with jQuery.val there is none of the events triggered in that case. The setvalue functionality does this for you.
$(selector).inputmask("setvalue", value);
var selector = document.getElementById("selector");
selector.inputmask.setValue(value);
Inputmask.setValue(selector, value);
Get or set an option on an existing inputmask. The option method is intented for adding extra options like callbacks, etc at a later time to the mask.
When extra options are set the mask is automatically reapplied, unless you pas true for the noremask argument.
Set an option
document.querySelector("#CellPhone").inputmask.option({
onBeforePaste: function (pastedValue, opts) {
return phoneNumOnPaste(pastedValue, opts);
}
});
$("#CellPhone").inputmask("option", {
onBeforePaste: function (pastedValue, opts) {
return phoneNumOnPaste(pastedValue, opts);
}
})
Instead of masking an input element it is also possible to use the inputmask for formatting given values. Think of formatting values to show in jqGrid or on other elements then inputs.
var formattedDate = Inputmask.format("2331973", { alias: "datetime", inputFormat: "dd/mm/yyyy"});
Validate a given value against the mask.
var isValid = Inputmask.isValid("23/03/1973", { alias: "datetime", inputFormat: "dd/mm/yyyy"});
Change the mask placeholder. Default: "_"
Instead of "_", you can change the unfilled characters mask as you like, simply by adding the placeholder
option.
For example, placeholder: " "
will change the default autofill with empty values
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#date").inputmask("99/99/9999",{ "placeholder": "*" });
});
or a multi-char placeholder
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#date").inputmask("99/99/9999",{ "placeholder": "dd/mm/yyyy" });
});
Definition of the symbols used to indicate an optional part in the mask.
optionalmarker: { start: "[", end: "]" }
Definition of the symbols used to indicate a quantifier in the mask.
quantifiermarker: { start: "{", end: "}" }
Definition of the symbols used to indicate a group in the mask.
groupmarker: { start: "(", end: ")" }
Definition of the symbols used to indicate an alternator part in the mask.
alternatormarker: "|"
Definition of the symbols used to escape a part in the mask.
escapeChar: "\\"
See escape special mask chars
The mask to use.
Inputmask({ mask: "9{*}").mask(selector);
Use a regular expression as a mask
Inputmask({ regex: "[0-9]*" }).mask(selector);
When using shorthands be aware that you need to double escape or use String.raw with a string literal.
Inputmask({ regex: "\\d*" }).mask(selector);
~
Inputmask({ regex: String.raw`\d*` }).mask(selector);
Execute a function when the mask is completed
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#date").inputmask("99/99/9999",{ "oncomplete": function(){ alert('inputmask complete'); } });
});
Execute a function when the mask is incomplete. Executes on blur.
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#date").inputmask("99/99/9999",{ "onincomplete": function(){ alert('inputmask incomplete'); } });
});
Execute a function when the mask is cleared.
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#date").inputmask("99/99/9999",{ "oncleared": function(){ alert('inputmask cleared'); } });
});
Mask repeat function. Repeat the mask definition x-times.
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#number").inputmask({ "mask": "9", "repeat": 10 }); // ~ mask "9999999999"
});
Default: false Toggle to allocate as much possible or the opposite. Non-greedy repeat function.
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#number").inputmask({ "mask": "9", "repeat": 10, "greedy": false }); // ~ mask "9" or mask "99" or ... mask "9999999999"
});
With the non-greedy option set to false, you can specify * as repeat. This makes an endless repeat.
Automatically unmask the value when retrieved.
Default: false.
When setting this option to true the plugin also expects the initial value from the server to be unmasked.
Remove the mask before submitting the form.
Default: false
Remove the empty mask on blur or when not empty removes the optional trailing part Default: true
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#ssn").inputmask("999-99-9999",{placeholder:" ", clearMaskOnLostFocus: true }); //default
});
Toggle to insert or overwrite input.
Default: true.
This option can be altered by pressing the Insert key.
Clear the incomplete input on blur
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#date").inputmask("99/99/9999",{ "clearIncomplete": true });
});
Definitions of aliases.
With an alias you can define a complex mask definition and call it by using an alias name. So this is mainly to simplify the use of your masks. Some aliases found in the extensions are: email, currency, decimal, integer, date, datetime, dd/mm/yyyy, etc.
First you have to create an alias definition. The alias definition can contain options for the mask, custom definitions, the mask to use etc.
When you pass in an alias, the alias is first resolved and then the other options are applied. So you can call an alias and pass another mask to be applied over the alias. This also means that you can write aliases which "inherit" from another alias.
Some examples can be found in jquery.inputmask.xxx.extensions.js
use:
$("#date").inputmask("datetime");
or
$("#date").inputmask({ alias: "datetime"});
You can also call an alias and extend it with some more options
$("#date").inputmask("datetime", { "clearIncomplete": true });
or
$("#date").inputmask({ alias: "datetime", "clearIncomplete": true });
The alias to use.
$("#date").inputmask({ alias: "email"});
Callback to implement autocomplete on certain keys for example
Function arguments: event, buffer, caretPos, opts
Function return:
Executes before masking the initial value to allow preprocessing of the initial value.
Function arguments: initialValue, opts
Function return: processedValue
$(selector).inputmask({
alias: 'phonebe',
onBeforeMask: function (value, opts) {
var processedValue = value.replace(/^0/g, "");
if (processedValue.indexOf("32") > 1 || processedValue.indexOf("32") == -1) {
processedValue = "32" + processedValue;
}
return processedValue;
}
});
This callback allows for preprocessing the pasted value before actually handling the value for masking. This can be usefull for stripping away some characters before processing.
Function arguments: pastedValue, opts
Function return: processedValue
$(selector).inputmask({
mask: '9999 9999 9999 9999',
placeholder: ' ',
showMaskOnHover: false,
showMaskOnFocus: false,
onBeforePaste: function (pastedValue, opts) {
var processedValue = pastedValue;
//do something with it
return processedValue;
}
});
You can also disable pasting a value by returning false in the onBeforePaste call.
Default: Calls the onBeforeMask
Executes before writing to the masked element
Use this to do some extra processing of the input. This can be usefull when implementing an alias, ex. decimal alias, autofill the digits when leaving the inputfield.
Function arguments: event, buffer, caretPos, opts
Function return: command object (see Define custom definitions)
Executes after unmasking to allow post-processing of the unmaskedvalue.
Function arguments: maskedValue, unmaskedValue
Function return: processedValue
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#number").inputmask("decimal", { onUnMask: function(maskedValue, unmaskedValue) {
//do something with the value
return unmaskedValue;
}});
});
Shows the mask when the input gets focus. (default = true)
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#ssn").inputmask("999-99-9999",{ showMaskOnFocus: true }); //default
});
To make sure no mask is visible on focus also set the showMaskOnHover to false. Otherwise hovering with the mouse will set the mask and will stay on focus.
Shows the mask when hovering the mouse. (default = true)
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#ssn").inputmask("999-99-9999",{ showMaskOnHover: true }); //default
});
Callback function is executed on every keyvalidation with the key & result as parameter.
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#ssn").inputmask("999-99-9999", {
onKeyValidation: function (key, result) {
console.log(key + " - " + result);
}
});
});
Numeric input direction. Keeps the caret at the end.
$(document).ready(function(){
$(selector).inputmask('€ 999.999.999,99', { numericInput: true }); //123456 => € ___.__1.234,56
});
Align the input to the right
By setting the rightAlign you can specify to right align an inputmask. This is only applied in combination op the numericInput option or the dir-attribute. Default is true.
$(document).ready(function(){
$(selector).inputmask('decimal', { rightAlign: false }); //disables the right alignment of the decimal input
});
Make escape behave like undo. (ctrl-Z)
Pressing escape reverts the value to the value before focus.
Default: true
Define the radixpoint (decimal separator)
Default: ""
Define the groupseparator
Default: ""
Default: null (~false) Use in combination with the alternator syntax Try to keep the mask static while typing. Decisions to alter the mask will be postponed if possible.
ex. $(selector).inputmask({ mask: ["+55-99-9999-9999", "+55-99-99999-9999", ], keepStatic: true });
typing 1212345123 => should result in +55-12-1234-5123 type extra 4 => switch to +55-12-12345-1234
When passing multiple masks (an array of masks) keepStatic is automatically set to true unless explicitly set through the options.
When enabled the caret position is set after the latest valid position on TAB Default: true
Allows for tabbing through the different parts of the masked field.
Default: false
With this call-in (hook) you can override the default implementation of the isComplete function.
Args => buffer, opts Return => true|false
$(selector).inputmask({
regex: "[0-9]*",
isComplete: function(buffer, opts) {
return new RegExp(opts.regex).test(buffer.join(''));
}
});
Hook to postValidate the result from isValid. Usefull for validating the entry as a whole. Args => buffer, pos, currentResult, opts
Return => true|false|command object
Hook to preValidate the input. Useful for validating regardless the definition. Args => buffer, pos, char, isSelection, opts => return true/false/command object When return true, the normal validation kicks in, otherwise it is skipped.
The staticDefinitionSymbol option is used to indicate that the static entries in the mask can match a certain definition. Especially usefull with alternators so that static element in the mask can match another alternation.
In the example below we mark the spaces as a possible match for the "i" definition. By doing so the mask can alternate to the second mask even when we typed already "12 3".
Inputmask("(99 99 999999)|(i{+})", {
definitions: {
"i": {
validator: ".",
definitionSymbol: "*"
}
},
staticDefinitionSymbol: "*"
}).mask(selector);
Return nothing when the user hasn't entered anything. Default: true
Disable value property patching Default: false
Positioning of the caret on click.
Options:
- none
- lvp (based on the last valid position (default)
- radixFocus (position caret to radixpoint on initial click)
- select (select the whole input)
- ignore (ignore the click and continue the mask)
Default: "lvp"
Apply casing at the mask-level. Options: null, "upper", "lower" or "title" or callback args => elem, test, pos, validPositions return charValue
casing: function(elem, test, pos, validPositions) {
do some processing || upper/lower input property in the validPositions
return elem; //upper/lower element
}
Default: null
Default: "verbatim" Specify the inputmode - already in place for when browsers start to support them https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#input-modalities:-the-inputmode-attribute
Default: false Create a css styleable mask.
You need to include the inputmask.css in your page to use this option.
See the inputmask.css for more info about the used styling. You can override the Inputmask.prototype.positionColorMask`if you need some custom positioning.
Inputmask.prototype.positionColorMask = function (input, template) {
template.style.left = input.offsetLeft + "px";
template.zIndex = input.zIndex - 1;
}
Default: false Disables predictive text on mobile devices.
What it does.
- changes the input type to password => disables predictive text
- enables the colorMask option which creates a div, which surrounds the input. So we type in the hidden password input and render the mask in the a created div.
To use the colorMask, you need to include the inputmask.css you might need to add some css-tweaks to make it all visually correct in your page.
Specify to use the data-inputmask attributes or to ignore them.
If you don't use data attributes you can disable the import by specifying importDataAttributes: false.
Default: true
Shift position of the mask entries on entry and deletion.
In some cases shift the mask enties isn't desired.
Ex. date masks. Shifting month to day makes no sense
Default: true
this can be done with the traditional jquery.val function (all browsers) or JavaScript value property for browsers which implement lookupGetter or getOwnPropertyDescriptor
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#number").val(12345);
var number = document.getElementById("number");
number.value = 12345;
});
with the autoUnmaskoption you can change the return of $.fn.val (or value property) to unmaskedvalue or the maskedvalue
$(document).ready(function(){
$('#<%= tbDate.ClientID%>').inputmask({ "mask": "99/99/9999", 'autoUnmask' : true}); // value: 23/03/1973
alert($('#<%= tbDate.ClientID%>').val()); // shows 23031973 (autoUnmask: true)
var tbDate = document.getElementById("<%= tbDate.ClientID%>");
alert(tbDate.value); // shows 23031973 (autoUnmask: true)
});
If you want a mask element to appear as a static element you can escape them by \
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#months").inputmask("m \\months");
});
You can define within a definition to automatically apply some casing on the entry in an input by giving the casing.
Casing can be null, "upper", "lower" or "title".
Inputmask.extendDefinitions({
'A': {
validator: "[A-Za-z]",
casing: "upper" //auto uppercasing
},
'+': {
validator: "[A-Za-z\u0410-\u044F\u0401\u04510-9]",
casing: "upper"
}
});
Include jquery.inputmask.extensions.js for using the A and # definitions.
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#test").inputmask("999-AAA"); // => 123abc ===> 123-ABC
});
<input id="test" dir="rtl" />
<input id="test" readonly="readonly" />
<input id="test" disabled="disabled" />
<input id="test" maxlength="4" />
You can also apply an inputmask by using the data-inputmask attribute. In the attribute you specify the options wanted for the inputmask. This gets parsed with $.parseJSON (for the moment), so be sure to use a well-formed json-string without the {}.
<input data-inputmask="'alias': 'datetime'" />
<input data-inputmask="'mask': '9', 'repeat': 10, 'greedy' : false" />
$(document).ready(function(){
$(":input").inputmask();
});
All options can also be passed through data-attributes.
<input data-inputmask-mask="9" data-inputmask-repeat="10" data-inputmask-greedy="false" />
$(document).ready(function(){
$(":input").inputmask();
});
When cloning a inputmask, the inputmask reactivates on the first event (mouseenter, focus, ...) that happens to the input. If you want to set a value on the cloned inputmask and you want to directly reactivate the masking you have to use $(input).inputmask("setvalue", value)