111

When submitting a form in AngularJS and use the browser remember password functionality, and in a subsequent login attempt you let the browser fill in the login form with the username and password, the $scope model won't be changed based on the autofill.

The only dirty hack I found is to use the following directive:

app.directive("xsInputSync", ["$timeout" , function($timeout) {
    return {
        restrict : "A",
        require: "?ngModel",
        link : function(scope, element, attrs, ngModel) {
            $timeout(function() {
                if (ngModel.$viewValue && ngModel.$viewValue !== element.val()) {
                    scope.apply(function() {
                        ngModel.$setViewValue(element.val());
                    });
                }
                console.log(scope);
                console.log(ngModel.$name);
                console.log(scope[ngModel.$name]);
            }, 3000);
        }
    };
}]);

The problem is that the ngModel.$setViewValue(element.val()); doesn't change the model nor the view based on the element.val() returned value. How can I accomplish that?

5
  • This code looks okay at first blush... but where is the rest (markup, etc)? Do you have a fiddle or plunk we can see?
    – Ben Lesh
    Feb 19, 2013 at 19:50
  • Here's the plunk: plnkr.co/edit/CHrBAVU9Ycl2ex2DRr6R I'm not sure if it works directly on plunker because it runs in an iframe.
    – lucassp
    Feb 19, 2013 at 19:57
  • 1
    You don't need to scope.$apply inside angular's $timeout. You might need it inside native window.setTimeout. But it's a better idea to use angular's one.
    – gorpacrate
    Nov 22, 2013 at 16:42
  • 1
    There is an "official" polyfill fix from Angular dev tbosch for this problem. Please see details in answer stackoverflow.com/a/25687396/3009639 below.
    – orszaczky
    Sep 5, 2014 at 15:16
  • Unfortunately the "official" fix is abandonware and doesn't work in many browsers. Issues have been filed but are not addressed so the search continues... Jun 12, 2016 at 18:15

23 Answers 23

45

Apparently this is a known issue with Angular and is currently open

I'm not sure what you could do here besides some sort of work around like you're trying. It seems you're on the right track. I couldn't get my browser to try to remember a password for your plunk, so I'm not sure if this will work but have a look:

app.directive('autoFillSync', function($timeout) {
   return {
      require: 'ngModel',
      link: function(scope, elem, attrs, ngModel) {
          var origVal = elem.val();
          $timeout(function () {
              var newVal = elem.val();
              if(ngModel.$pristine && origVal !== newVal) {
                  ngModel.$setViewValue(newVal);
              }
          }, 500);
      }
   }
});
<form name="myForm" ng-submit="login()">
   <label for="username">Username</label>
   <input type="text" id="username" name="username" ng-model="username" auto-fill-sync/><br/>
   <label for="password">Password</label>
   <input type="password" id="password" name="password" ng-model="password" auto-fill-sync/><br/>
   <button type="submit">Login</button>
</form>

I think you just need to simplify your approach a bit. The one thing I definitely recommend is to check ngModel.$pristine and make sure you're not overwriting some poor user's input. Also, 3 seconds is probably too long. You shouldn't have to call $apply() in a $timeout, BTW, it should queue a $digest for you automatically.

The real catch: Will your browser beat Angular to execution? What about my browser?

This is probably an unwinnable war, which is why Angular (or Knockout) hasn't been able to solve it readily. There's no guarantee of the state of the data in your input at the time of the directive's initial execution. Not even at the time of Angular's initialization.... So it's a tricky problem to solve.

17
  • 1
    Good point about $pristine. Well, 3 seconds is there just for testing purposes. The "Save Password" dialog seems to work on Safari. That's another issue which I have to investigate.
    – lucassp
    Feb 19, 2013 at 20:28
  • Just fool him with local storage. :) ... I'll keep thinking about it. But I have my doubts about the feasability of making autofill work with any two-way bindings.
    – Ben Lesh
    Feb 19, 2013 at 20:32
  • Yes, but I still need to be able to update the model from a directive for it to work.
    – lucassp
    Feb 19, 2013 at 20:37
  • 1
    I was kidding about localStorage, you wouldn't want to keep passwords there.
    – Ben Lesh
    Feb 19, 2013 at 20:46
  • 1
    This won't work with Safari and the credit card autofill, as this autofill is triggered at any time by the user Oct 8, 2014 at 3:29
35

Here is a solution that is far less hacky than other solutions presented and is semantically sound AngularJS: http://victorblog.com/2014/01/12/fixing-autocomplete-autofill-on-angularjs-form-submit/

myApp.directive('formAutofillFix', function() {
  return function(scope, elem, attrs) {
    // Fixes Chrome bug: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/angular/6NlucSskQjY
    elem.prop('method', 'POST');

    // Fix autofill issues where Angular doesn't know about autofilled inputs
    if(attrs.ngSubmit) {
      setTimeout(function() {
        elem.unbind('submit').submit(function(e) {
          e.preventDefault();
          elem.find('input, textarea, select').trigger('input').trigger('change').trigger('keydown');
          scope.$apply(attrs.ngSubmit);
        });
      }, 0);
    }
  };
});

Then you simply attach the directive to your form:

<form ng-submit="submitLoginForm()" form-autofill-fix>
  <div>
    <input type="email" ng-model="email" ng-required />
    <input type="password" ng-model="password" ng-required />
    <button type="submit">Log In</button>
  </div>
</form>
3
  • 2
    This one worked. We tried most of the above without any result. Thanks!!! The result is on mobbr.com Jan 15, 2014 at 9:47
  • 1
    As this uses jQuery, it is not expected to work without jQuery. Mar 24, 2014 at 17:53
  • 2
    Here we are in 2018 and this is still the fix. Thanks Ezekiel! Jan 27, 2018 at 22:25
35

You don't have to use a $timeout or anything like this. You can use an event system.

I think it's more Angularish and does not depend on jQuery or custom event catching.

For example on your submit handler:

$scope.doLogin = function() {
    $scope.$broadcast("autofill:update");

    // Continue with the login.....
};

And then you can have an autofill directive like this:

.directive("autofill", function () {
    return {
        require: "ngModel",
        link: function (scope, element, attrs, ngModel) {
            scope.$on("autofill:update", function() {
                ngModel.$setViewValue(element.val());
            });
        }
    }
});

Finally, your HTML will be like:

<input type="text" name="username" ng-model="user.id" autofill="autofill"/>
2
  • 14
    In my case submit button is disabled while inputs are empty.
    – gorpacrate
    Nov 22, 2013 at 16:04
  • 4
    don't you ever have trouble with this as it is async? where the login call to the server already leaves before the event was replicated and the directive had time to update the scope?
    – Sander
    Jan 13, 2014 at 10:17
12

No need to hack anymore! Angular dev tbosch made a polyfill that triggers a change event when the browser changes form fields without triggering a change event:

https://github.com/tbosch/autofill-event

For now they won't build this into the Angular code, as this is a bugfix for the browser, and also works without Angular (e.g. for plain jQuery apps).

"The polyfill will check for changes on document load and also when an input is left (only in the same form). However, you can trigger the check manually if you want to.

The project has unit tests as well as semi automatic tests, so we finally have a place to collect all the different use case together with the required browser settings.

Please note: This polyfill works with plain AngularJS apps, with AngularJS/jQuery apps but also with plain jQuery apps that do not use Angular."

It can be installed with:

bower install autofill-event --save

Add the script autofill-event.js after jQuery or Angular in your page.

This will do the following:

  • after DOMContentLoaded: check all input fields
  • a field is left: check all other fields in the same form

API (to manually trigger the check):

  • $el.checkAndTriggerAutoFillEvent(): Execute the check for all DOM elements in the given jQuery / jQLite element.

How it works

  1. Remember all changes to input elements by the user (listening for change events) and also by JavaScript (by intercepting $el.val() for jQuery / jQLite elements). That changed value is stored on the element in a private property.

  2. Checking an element for auto fill: Compare the current value of the element with the remembered value. If it's different, trigger a change event.

Dependencies

AngularJS or jQuery (works with either one or both)

More info and source on the github page.

Original Angular Issue #1460 on Github can be read here.

4
  • 2
    This does not work for my cases. checkAndTriggerAutoFillEvent() is triggered and generates events, but AngularJS never updates its models and thinks that the fields are empty.
    – Splaktar
    Oct 23, 2014 at 18:17
  • I haven't had any problems using this polyill. If you can't get it to work properly, you should create a separate question including some code. If you find a bug, you should check the tickets on github, or open a new one.
    – orszaczky
    Oct 24, 2014 at 15:43
  • Yep, I think that it is related to this bug: github.com/tbosch/autofill-event/issues/11
    – Splaktar
    Oct 24, 2014 at 17:34
  • 1
    ngModelOptions combined with autofill-event means you can now specify change as one of the updateOn events to make sure your model is correctly synced.
    – morloch
    Oct 7, 2015 at 11:47
10

Dirty code, check if issue https://github.com/angular/angular.js/issues/1460#issuecomment-18572604 is fixed before using this code. This directive triggers events when field is filled, not only before submit (it's necessary if you have to handle input before submit)

 .directive('autoFillableField', function() {
    return {
                   restrict: "A",
                   require: "?ngModel",
                   link: function(scope, element, attrs, ngModel) {
                       setInterval(function() {
                           var prev_val = '';
                           if (!angular.isUndefined(attrs.xAutoFillPrevVal)) {
                               prev_val = attrs.xAutoFillPrevVal;
                           }
                           if (element.val()!=prev_val) {
                               if (!angular.isUndefined(ngModel)) {
                                   if (!(element.val()=='' && ngModel.$pristine)) {
                                       attrs.xAutoFillPrevVal = element.val();
                                       scope.$apply(function() {
                                           ngModel.$setViewValue(element.val());
                                       });
                                   }
                               }
                               else {
                                   element.trigger('input');
                                   element.trigger('change');
                                   element.trigger('keyup');
                                   attrs.xAutoFillPrevVal = element.val();
                               }
                           }
                       }, 300);
                   }
               };
});
5

Seems like clear straight ahead solution. No jQuery needed.

UPDATE:

  • Model is updated only when model value isn't equal to actual input value.
  • Checking doesn't stop on first autofill. In case if you wish to use another account for example.

app.directive('autofillable', ['$timeout', function ($timeout) {
    return {
        scope: true,
        require: 'ngModel',
        link: function (scope, elem, attrs, ctrl) {
            scope.check = function(){
                var val = elem[0].value;
                if(ctrl.$viewValue !== val){
                    ctrl.$setViewValue(val)
                }
                $timeout(scope.check, 300);
            };
            scope.check();
        }
    }
}]);
2
  • 4
    +1 good solution, similar to what I came up with. The only addition I would suggest is to first check if the model is $pristine before changing it, and then after changing it keep it's $pristine state. Otherwise you'll find that if a form is loaded with no autofill data, the above directive will still update the model and subsequently make it dirty even though the form control should be still considered untouched. example here, using your directive. I've commented out the code I would add to it: jsfiddle.net/OACDesigns/L8Sja/4
    – OACDesigns
    Dec 16, 2013 at 17:24
  • 1
    also, I think scope:true should be scope:{}
    – OACDesigns
    Dec 16, 2013 at 17:31
4

Solution 1 [Using $timeout]:

Directive:

app.directive('autoFillSync', function($timeout) {
    return {
      require: 'ngModel',
      link: function(scope, elem, attrs, model) {
          var origVal = elem.val();
          $timeout(function () {
              var newVal = elem.val();
              if(model.$pristine && origVal !== newVal) {
                  model.$setViewValue(newVal);
              }
          }, 500);
      }
    };
});

HTML:

<form name="myForm" ng-submit="login()">
  <label for="username">Username</label>
  <input type="text" id="username" name="username" ng-model="username" auto-fill-sync/><br/>
  <label for="password">Password</label>
  <input type="password" id="password" name="password" ng-model="password" auto-fill-sync/><br/>
  <button type="submit">Login</button>
</form>

Solution 2 [Using angular events]:

Ref: Becko's answer

Directive:

app.directive("autofill", function () {
    return {
        require: "ngModel",
        link: function (scope, element, attrs, ngModel) {
            scope.$on("autofill:update", function() {
                ngModel.$setViewValue(element.val());
            });
        }
    };
});

HTML:

<form name="myForm" ng-submit="login()">
  <label for="username">Username</label>
  <input type="text" id="username" name="username" ng-model="username" autofill/><br/>
  <label for="password">Password</label>
  <input type="password" id="password" name="password" ng-model="password" autofill/><br/>
  <button type="submit">Login</button>
</form>

Solution 3 [Using relay method calls]:

Directive:

app.directive('autoFill', function() {
    return {
        restrict: 'A',
        link: function(scope,element) {
            scope.submit = function(){
                scope.username = element.find("#username").val();
                scope.password = element.find("#password").val();
                scope.login();//call a login method in your controller or write the code here itself
            }

        }
    };
});

HTML:

<form name="myForm" auto-fill ng-submit="submit()">
   <label for="username">Username</label>
   <input type="text" id="username" name="username" ng-model="username" />
   <label for="password">Password</label>
   <input type="password" id="password" name="password" ng-model="password" />
   <button type="submit">Login</button>
</form>
1
  • 2
    Solution 1 worked very well for a time, but now on angularjs 1.4.9 it doesn't work anymore. Checking model.$valid in directive returns true both before and after $setViewValue, but the element is still with ng-invalid class
    – Jānis
    Feb 10, 2016 at 11:13
4

Well, the easiest way it's to emulate the browser's behavior, so if there is a problem with the change event, just fire it yourself. Much simpler.

Directive:

yourModule.directive('triggerChange', function($sniffer) {
    return {
        link : function(scope, elem, attrs) {
            elem.on('click', function(){
                $(attrs.triggerChange).trigger(
                    $sniffer.hasEvent('input') ? 'input' : 'change'
                );
            });
        },
        priority : 1
    }
});

HTML:

<form >
    <input data-ng-model="user.nome" type="text" id="username">

    <input data-ng-model="user.senha" type="password" id="password" >

    <input type="submit" data-ng-click="login.connect()" id="btnlogin" 
           data-trigger-change="#password,#username"/>
</form>

You can do some variations, like putting the directive on the form and firing the event on all inputs with the .dirty class on form submit.

0
3

This is jQuery way :

$(window).load(function() {
   // updates autofilled fields
   window.setTimeout(function() {
     $('input[ng-model]').trigger('input');
   }, 100);
 });

This is Angular way :

 app.directive('autofill', ['$timeout', function ($timeout) {
    return {
        scope: true,
        require: 'ngModel',
        link: function (scope, elem, attrs, ctrl) {
            $timeout(function(){
                $(elem[0]).trigger('input');
                // elem.trigger('input'); try this if above don't work
            }, 200)
        }
    }
}]);

HTML

<input type="number" autofill /> 
5
  • 2
    Completely non-angular way.
    – gorpacrate
    Nov 22, 2013 at 16:05
  • 1
    @gorpacrate : Now check it out with angular way.
    – Nishchit
    Nov 23, 2013 at 6:31
  • 2
    The Angular Way's tabs have too many spaces. Just kiddin. I love horizontal scrolling. Dec 1, 2013 at 13:12
  • this doesnt work in angular as there is no function trigger on element. I think this would require to include jquery
    – Tomas
    Sep 10, 2014 at 8:36
  • 1
    triggerHandler('input') should be ok if you don't have full blown jquery
    – O'Mutt
    Mar 24, 2015 at 20:34
1

Here's another workaround that's less hacky, but requires some extra code in the controller.

HTML:

<form ng-submit="submitForm()" ng-controller="FormController">
    <input type="text" ng-model="username" autocomplete-username>
    <input type="submit">
</form>

Directive (CoffeeScript):

directives.directive 'autocompleteUsername', ->
    return (scope, element) ->
        scope.getUsername = ->
            element.val()

Controller:

controllers.controller 'FormController', [->
    $scope.submitForm = ->
        username = $scope.getUsername?() ? $scope.username
        # HTTP stuff...
]
2
  • You have this in vanilla JavaScript?
    – f1lt3r
    Nov 30, 2015 at 19:13
  • CoffeeScript.org provides a translator: done here
    – jab
    Dec 4, 2015 at 22:48
1

This is the only solution I've found that allowed all of my Angular' validations to work as designed including disable/enable of submit button. Installs with bower and 1 script tag. Bazinga!

https://github.com/tbosch/autofill-event

1
  • 1
    this poly fill doesn't fit with a submit button/input binding to the form state. unless you click on the page any point you want to trigger a digest (it seems the action trigger the browser to do some real filling), then the button become enable.Test page with manual tests
    – e-cloud
    Mar 12, 2015 at 9:33
1

Changing the model value, instead of using a timeout function worked for me.

Here is my code:

module.directive('autoFill', [ function() {
    return {
        require: 'ngModel',
        link:function(scope, element, attr, ngModel) {
            var origVal = element.val();
            if(origVal){
                ngModel.$modelValue = ngModel.$modelValue || origVal;
            }
        }
    };
}]);
1

One-liner workaround in the submit handler (requires jQuery):

if (!$scope.model) $scope.model = $('#input_field').val();
1
  • It's not really a one-liner if it's in a directive, which it certainly should be.
    – isherwood
    May 11, 2017 at 18:35
0

I force a $setValue(val()) on submit: (this works without jQuery)

   var ValidSubmit = ['$parse', function ($parse) {
    return {
        compile: function compile(tElement, tAttrs, transclude) {
            return {
                post: function postLink(scope, element, iAttrs, controller) {
                    var form = element.controller('form');
                    form.$submitted = false;
                    var fn = $parse(iAttrs.validSubmit);
                    element.on('submit', function(event) {
                        scope.$apply(function() {
                            var inputs = element.find('input');
                            for(var i=0; i < inputs.length; i++) {
                                var ele = inputs.eq(i);
                                var field = form[inputs[i].name];
                                field.$setViewValue(ele.val());
                            }
                            element.addClass('ng-submitted');
                            form.$submitted = true;
                            if(form.$valid) {
                                fn(scope, {$event:event});
                            }
                        });
                    });
                    scope.$watch(function() { return form.$valid}, function(isValid) {
                        if(form.$submitted == false) return;
                        if(isValid) {
                            element.removeClass('has-error').addClass('has-success');
                        } else {
                            element.removeClass('has-success');
                            element.addClass('has-error');
                        }
                    });
                }
            }
        }
    }
}]
app.directive('validSubmit', ValidSubmit);
0

I am very new to Angularjs, but I found a simple solution to that problem=> Force Angular to reevaluate expression... by changing it! (of course you need to remember the initial value to revert to initial state) Here is the way it goes in your controller function for submitting the form:

    $scope.submit = function () {
                var oldpassword = $scope.password;
                $scope.password = '';
                $scope.password = oldpassword;
//rest of your code of the submit function goes here...

where of course, the value entered in your password input has been set by windows and not by user.

0

You can try this code :

yourapp.directive('autofill',function () {

    return {
        scope: true,
        require: 'ngModel',
        link: function (scope, elem, attrs, ctrl) {
            var origVal = elem.val();
            if (origVal != '') {
                elem.trigger('input');
            }
        }
    }
});
0

A minor modification to this answer (https://stackoverflow.com/a/14966711/3443828): use an $interval instead of a $timeout so you don't have to race the browser.

mod.directive('autoFillSync', function($interval) {
    function link(scope, element, attrs, ngModel) {
        var origVal = element.val();
        var refresh = $interval(function() {
          if (!ngModel.$pristine) {
            $interval.cancel(refresh);
          }else{
            var newVal = element.val();
            if (origVal !== newVal) {
              ngModel.$setViewValue(newVal);
              $interval.cancel(refresh);
            }
          }
        }, 100);
    }

    return {
      require: 'ngModel',
      link: link
    }
  });
0

This is the solution I ended up using in my forms.

.directive('autofillSync', [ function(){
  var link = function(scope, element, attrs, ngFormCtrl){
    element.on('submit', function(event){
      if(ngFormCtrl.$dirty){
        console.log('returning as form is dirty');
        return;
      }   
      element.find('input').each(function(index, input){
        angular.element(input).trigger('input');
      }); 
    }); 
  };  
  return {
    /* negative priority to make this post link function run first */
    priority:-1,
    link: link,
    require: 'form'
  };  
}]);

And the form's template will be

<form autofill-sync name="user.loginForm" class="login-form" novalidate ng-submit="signIn()">
    <!-- Input fields here -->
</form>

This way I was able to run any parsers/formatters I have on my ng-model and have the submit functionality transparent.

0

Solution without directives:

.run(["$window", "$rootElement", "$timeout", function($window, $rootElement, $timeout){

        var event =$window.document.createEvent("HTMLEvents");
        event.initEvent("change", true, true);

        $timeout(function(){

            Array.apply(null, $rootElement.find("input")).forEach(function(item){
                if (item.value.length) {
                    item.$$currentValue = item.value;
                    item.dispatchEvent(event);
                }
            });

        }, 500);
    }])
0

This is a simple fix that works for all the cases I've tested in both Firefox and Chrome. Note that with the top answer (directive w/ timeout) I had issues with -

  • Browser back / forward buttons, don't re-fire page load events (so the fix doesn't apply)
  • Loading of credentials some time after page load. e.g. in Firefox, double click on the login box and select from stored credentials.
  • Need a solution that updates before form submission since I disable the Login button until valid input provided

This fix is obviously very dumb and hacky, but it works 100% of the time -

function myScope($scope, $timeout) {
    // ...
    (function autoFillFix() {
        $timeout(function() { 
            $('#username').trigger('change'); 
            $('#password').trigger('change'); 
            autoFillFix(); }, 500);                    
    })();
}
1
  • 1
    could replace $timeout with $interval to give future devs a bit more context and get rid of the strange looking recursive calls going on there
    – O'Mutt
    Mar 24, 2015 at 20:36
0

None of these solutions worked for my use case. I have some form fields that use ng-change to watch for change. Using $watch is no help as it is not triggered by autofill. Since I have no submit button there is no easy way to run some of the solutions and I was not successful using intervals.

I ended up disabling autofill - not ideal but a lot less confusing to the user.

<input readonly onfocus="this.removeAttribute('readonly');">

Found the answer here

-1

If you are using jQuery you could do this on form submit:

HTML:

<form ng-submit="submit()">
    <input id="email" ng-model="password" required 
           type="text" placeholder="Your email">
    <input id="password" ng-model="password" required 
           type="password" placeholder="Password">
</form>

JS:

 $scope.submit = function() {
     $scope.password = $('#password').val();
}
1
  • 1
    Although this might work it's not reasonable for more complex forms. Jan 17, 2014 at 17:07
-1

If you want to keep it simple just get the value using javascript

In your angular js controller :

var username = document.getElementById('username').value;

1
  • I think you dont understand what the problem is
    – aelor
    Apr 24, 2015 at 11:22

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