1166

According to html5.org, the "number" input type's "value attribute, if specified and not empty, must have a value that is a valid floating point number."

Yet it is simply (in the latest version of Chrome, anyway), an "updown" control with integers, not floats:

<input type="number" id="totalAmt"></input>

Is there a floating point input element native to HTML5, or a way to make the number input type work with floats, not ints? Or must I resort to a jQuery UI plugin?

0

13 Answers 13

2413
+50

The number type has a step value controlling which numbers are valid (along with max and min), which defaults to 1. This value is also used by implementations for the stepper buttons (i.e. pressing up increases by step).

Simply change this value to whatever is appropriate. For money, two decimal places are probably expected:

<label for="totalAmt">Total Amount</label>
<input type="number" step="0.01" id="totalAmt">

(I'd also set min=0 if it can only be positive)

If you'd prefer to allow any number of decimal places, you can use step="any" (though for currencies, I'd recommend sticking to 0.01). In Chrome & Firefox, the stepper buttons will increment / decrement by 1 when using any. (thanks to Michal Stefanow's answer for pointing out any, and see the relevant spec here)

Here's a playground showing how various steps affect various input types:

<form>
  <input type=number step=1 /> Step 1 (default)<br />
  <input type=number step=0.01 /> Step 0.01<br />
  <input type=number step=any /> Step any<br />
  <input type=range step=20 /> Step 20<br />
  <input type=datetime-local step=60 /> Step 60 (default)<br />
  <input type=datetime-local step=1 /> Step 1<br />
  <input type=datetime-local step=any /> Step any<br />
  <input type=datetime-local step=0.001 /> Step 0.001<br />
  <input type=datetime-local step=3600 /> Step 3600 (1 hour)<br />
  <input type=datetime-local step=86400 /> Step 86400 (1 day)<br />
  <input type=datetime-local step=70 /> Step 70 (1 min, 10 sec)<br />
</form>


As usual, I'll add a quick note: remember that client-side validation is just a convenience to the user. You must also validate on the server-side!

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  • 9
    This is not working correctly in latest versions of Firefox: bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1003896
    – trpt4him
    Jan 3, 2015 at 15:40
  • 19
    @Dave: Yes, technically, omitting quotes is fine, bit it introduces a host of potential issues. First, a subset of characters are handled differently in different browsers and versions thereof. If you choose not to use quotes, then you must be constantly cognizant of which characters will cause problems in each browser and version. That's a lot of mental power devoted to something that's not necessary to worry about at all if you just use quotes. (cont.) Aug 12, 2015 at 18:10
  • 24
    Second, while you may be fine with worrying about the rules of which characters are fine and which aren't, the developer that comes behind you probably won't be. That then requires that they either endure the arduous task of adding quotes to all the attributes you left unquoted or worse, simply introduce problems into the code which they might not even understand the source of. Finally, since sometimes you will have to use quotes, the code then looks inconsistent with some attributes quoted and others not. Aug 12, 2015 at 18:12
  • 3
    @relipse see here: stackoverflow.com/q/3790935/1180785 but be sure to read the comments for each answer; it looks like all options have drawbacks, and you'll need to see what fits your particular needs.
    – Dave
    Mar 5, 2016 at 10:42
  • 3
    People should really remember and learn to use XHTML Standards... It answers simple questions like the one about quotes.. I forced myself to learn these standards many many many many years ago.... w3.org/TR/xhtml1/#h-4.4 All attribute values must be quoted, even those which appear to be numeric. Omiitting quotes is just asking for trouble.. More so if you have dynamic content/values..
    – Angry 84
    Nov 9, 2017 at 1:21
210

Via: http://blog.isotoma.com/2012/03/html5-input-typenumber-and-decimalsfloats-in-chrome/

But what if you want all the numbers to be valid, integers and decimals alike? In this case, set step to “any”

<input type="number" step="any" />

Works for me in Chrome, not tested in other browsers.

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  • 6
    Chrome => Works perfect Safari => Will not show error message, and if not number it will not pass to server IE => Version less than 10 not, works
    – Abhi
    May 28, 2015 at 13:04
  • 7
    Unfortunately in chrome it allows you to enter multiple decimal points, for instance an IP address.
    – Andy
    Dec 17, 2015 at 15:43
  • 1
    @Andy newer versions of chrome this is fixed. This should be the acepted answer nowadays.
    – andrecj
    Feb 23, 2021 at 11:16
  • in FireFox it allows to input anything but validation will be failed. Still think this is the best answer Jul 21, 2023 at 15:18
33

You can use:

<input type="number" step="any" min="0" max="100" value="22.33">
0
29

You can use the step attribute to the input type number:

<input type="number" id="totalAmt" step="0.1"></input>

step="any" will allow any decimal.
step="1" will allow no decimal.
step="0.5" will allow 0.5; 1; 1.5; ...
step="0.1" will allow 0.1; 0.2; 0.3; 0.4; ...

14

Based on this answer

<input type="text" id="sno" placeholder="Only float with dot !"   
   onkeypress="return (event.charCode >= 48 && event.charCode <= 57) ||  
   event.charCode == 46 || event.charCode == 0 ">

Meaning :

Char code :

  • 48-57 equal to 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
  • 0 is Backspace(otherwise need refresh page on Firefox)
  • 46 is dot

&& is AND , || is OR operator.

if you try float with comma :

<input type="text" id="sno" placeholder="Only float with comma !"   
     onkeypress="return (event.charCode >= 48 && event.charCode <= 57) ||  
     event.charCode == 44 || event.charCode == 0 ">

Supported Chromium and Firefox (Linux X64)(other browsers I does not exist.)

6
  • 1
    Feels backward. How about copy & paste in the field? Jan 15, 2017 at 17:35
  • 1
    use this method, but need validation before inserting @MichalStefanow
    – dsgdfg
    Jan 17, 2017 at 10:22
  • 6
    Hack for input, hack for copy & paste, hack on top of a hack = bad practice. We have 2017 Jan 17, 2017 at 14:46
  • 1
    Where you read any password inputs ? Who care which method using after a session ? No, we have 1856 ! Try another user !
    – dsgdfg
    Jan 18, 2017 at 11:57
  • 1
    Sounds too complicated, but, reasoning on this method versus other mentioned not provided Feb 26, 2018 at 21:38
12

yes this is the correct answer:

step="any"

This is more efficient. Trust me.

<input type="number" step="any">

document.getElementById('form1').addEventListener('submit', function(e){
e.preventDefault();
alert("Your nnumber is: "+document.getElementById('n1').value)
alert("This works no ? :) please upvote")
})
<form id="form1">
<input type="number" step="any" id="n1">
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
<!-- UPVOTE :)-->

11

I do so

 <input id="relacionac" name="relacionac" type="number" min="0.4" max="0.7" placeholder="0,40-0,70" class="form-control input-md" step="0.01">

then, I define min in 0.4 and max in 0.7 with step 0.01: 0.4, 0.41, 0,42 ... 0.7

11

I have started using inputmode="decimal" which works flawlessly with smartphones:

<input type="text" inputmode="decimal" value="1.5">

Note that we have to use type="text" instead of number. However, on desktop it still allows letters as values.

For desktop you could use:

<input type="number" inputmode="decimal">

which allows 0-9 and . as input and only numbers.

Note that some countries use , as decimal dividor which is activated as default on the NumPad. Thus entering a float number by Numpad would not work as the input field expects a . (in Chrome). That's why you should use type="text" if you have international users on your website.


You can try this on desktop (also with Numpad) and your phone:

<p>Input with type text:</p>
<input type="text" inputmode="decimal" value="1.5">
<br>
<p>Input with type number:</p>
<input type="number" inputmode="decimal" value="1.5">


Reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Global_attributes/inputmode

7

I just had the same problem, and I could fix it by just putting a comma and not a period/full stop in the number because of French localization.

So it works with:

2 is OK

2,5 is OK

2.5 is KO (The number is considered "illegal" and you receive empty value).

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  • 8
    add lang="en" to input or any parent and it will start using english number style Feb 16, 2019 at 19:31
7
<input type="number" step="any">

This worked for me and i think is the easiest way to make the input field accept any decimal number irrespective of how long the decimal part is. Step attribute actually shows the input field how many decimal points should be accepted. E.g, step="0.01" will accept only two decimal points.

4

Using React on my IPad, type="number" does not work perfectly for me. For my floating point numbers in the range between 99.99999 - .00000 I use the regular expression (^[0-9]{0,2}$)|(^[0-9]{0,2}\.[0-9]{0,5}$). The first group (...) is true for all positive two digit numbers without the floating point (e.g. 23), | or e.g. .12345 for the second group (...). You can adopt it for any positive floating point number by simply changing the range {0,2} or {0,5} respectively.

<input
  className="center-align"
  type="text"
  pattern="(^[0-9]{0,2}$)|(^[0-9]{0,2}\.[0-9]{0,5}$)"
  step="any"
  maxlength="7"
  validate="true"
/>
4

This topic (e.g. step="0.01") relates to stepMismatch and is supported by all browsers as follows: enter image description here

2

If any of the methods doesn't work you can use parse float.

const totalAmt = document.getElementById("totalAmt");


totalAmt.addEventListener("change", (e)=>{
      // e.preventDefault(e);
      const result = parseFloat(e.target.value);
     console.log(result)
});
<input type="text" id="totalAmt" />

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