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5

I'm quite new to jQuery, and I've written a simple function to check the strength of a password for each keypress.

The idea is that every time a user enters a character, the contents is evaluated to test the strengh of the password they have entered... I'm sure everyone has seen these before.

Anyhow, the logic I have used is that no password begins with a value of 1. When a lower-case character is used, the score increments to 2. When a digit is used the score increments by 1 again, same for when an uppercase character is used and when the password becomes 5 or more characters long.

What is returned is the strength of the password so far as a value from 1 to 5 every time a key is pressed.

So, about my question. The way that I've done it doesn't seem very jQuery like... almost like I may as well have just done straight javascript. Also I was wondering about my logic. Have I done anything done or overlooked something? Any suggestions from smarter people than myself?

Any suggestions or advice would be appreciated.

$(document).ready(function(){

		$("#pass_strength").keyup(function() {

			var strength = 1;

			/*length 5 characters or more*/
			if(this.value.length >= 5) {
				strength++;
			}

			/*contains lowercase characters*/
			if(this.value.match(/[a-z]+/)) {
				strength++;
			}

			/*contains digits*/
			if(this.value.match(/[0-9]+/)) {
				strength++;
			}

			/*contains uppercase characters*/
			if(this.value.match(/[A-Z]+/)) {
				strength++;
			}

			alert(strength);
		});
	 });
flag

+1 great question – karim79 Sep 7 at 10:29

6 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

The best way is to take an existing plugin as TJB suggested.

As to your question about the code itself, a nicer way is to write it like that:

var strength = 1;
var arr = [/{5,}/, /[a-z]+/, /[0-9]+/, /[A-Z]+/];
jQuery.each(arr, function(i, regexp) {
  if(this.value.match(regexp))
     strength++;
}
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vote up 0 vote down

If you are doing as excersie

Reference: Password Strength Indicator

jQuery Code Used (# denotes what have changed from Benjamin's code)

$.fn.passwordStrength = function( options ){
return this.each(function(){
	var that = this;that.opts = {};
	that.opts = $.extend({}, $.fn.passwordStrength.defaults, options);

	that.div = $(that.opts.targetDiv);
	that.defaultClass = that.div.attr('class');

	that.percents = (that.opts.classes.length) ? 100 / that.opts.classes.length : 100;

	v = $(this)
	.keyup(function(){
		if( typeof el == "undefined" )
		this.el = $(this);
		var s = getPasswordStrength (this.value);
		var p = this.percents;
		var t = Math.floor( s / p );

		if( 100 <= s )
		t = this.opts.classes.length - 1;

		this.div
		.removeAttr('class')
		.addClass( this.defaultClass )
		.addClass( this.opts.classes[ t ] );
	})
	# Removed generate password button creation
});

function getPasswordStrength(H){
	var D=(H.length);

	# Added below to make all passwords less than 4 characters show as weak
	if (D<4) { D=0 }


	if(D>5){
		D=5
	}
	var F=H.replace(/[0-9]/g,"");
	var G=(H.length-F.length);
	if(G>3){G=3}
	var A=H.replace(/\W/g,"");
	var C=(H.length-A.length);
	if(C>3){C=3}
	var B=H.replace(/[A-Z]/g,"");
	var I=(H.length-B.length);
	if(I>3){I=3}
	var E=((D*10)-20)+(G*10)+(C*15)+(I*10);
	if(E<0){E=0}
	if(E>100){E=100}
	return E
}


# Removed generate password function
};

$(document)
.ready(function(){
$('input[name="password2"]').passwordStrength({targetDiv: '#iSM',classes : Array('weak','medium','strong')});

});
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vote up 0 vote down

You can try the jQuery plugins for password strength check

Some of them are

Password Strength Meter

Password Strength Indicator

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vote up 1 vote down

On top of gs' answer, you should check the password against common dictionary words (using a hash, probably). Otherwise a weak password like 'Yellow1' will be evaluated as strong by your logic.

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vote up 2 vote down

I would suggest evaluating an existing jquery password strength plugin. (unless your just doing it as an exersize)

Here are a few links I found:

http://www.visual-blast.com/javascript/password-strength-checker/

http://phiras.wordpress.com/2007/04/08/password-strength-meter-a-jquery-plugin/

http://benjaminsterling.com/?p=117

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vote up 1 vote down
  • The length of the password should be at least 8 characters.
  • The strength increases with the length, a longer password should have more points.
  • Include special characters like #/" and the like. (Or just any other than [a-Z0-9])
  • For really long passwords this method could get slow. Why don't you just test every new character and use a dictionary for which features the password already has.
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