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What is the best way to limit the amount of text that a user can enter into a 'textarea' field on a web page? The application in question is ASP .NET, but a platform agnostic answer is preferred.

I understand that some amount of javascript is likely needed to get this done as I do not wish to actually perform the 'post' with that amount of data if possible as ASP .NET does have an upper limit to the size of the request that it will service (though I don't know what that is exactly).

So maybe the real question is, what's the best way to do this in javascript that will meet the following criteria:

-Must work equally well for both users simply typing data and copy/paste'ing data in from another source.

-Must be as '508 compliance' friendly as possible.

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6 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

use a RegularExpressionValidator Control in ASP.Net to validate number of character along with with usual validation

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I like this option because it automatically does the validation both server-side and client side. – Joel Coehoorn Dec 18 '08 at 16:27
Yah I like this option as well for the same reason. – Jesse Dec 18 '08 at 19:49
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jQuery also provides some options here. Options, options, and options.

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I use this, where the limit is a must. It also provides the user with the number of characters left.

function CountLength(vControl)
	{
		var strValue = vControl.value;
		var vMax = 480;
		var vLeft = vMax - strValue.length;
		if (vLeft < 0)
		{
			vLeft = 0;
		}
		var vMessage = returnObjById('TextCounter');
		if (document.all)
		{
			vMessage.innerText = vLeft + ' characters remaining.';
		}
		else
		{	
			vMessage.textContent = vLeft + ' characters remaining.';
		}
		if (vLeft == 0)
		{
			vControl.value = vControl.value.substring(0, vMax);
		}
	}
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The only thing I'd worry about with the visual indicator is how '508 compliant' that would be. What would a screen reader do with that? – Jesse Dec 18 '08 at 19:47
I am not too familiar with screen readers. I guess that unless there is a post back, the screen reader would still read the source as 480 characters remaining. How do they deal with ajax I wonder? – Jim Dec 18 '08 at 20:36
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function limit(element, max_chars)
{
    if(element.value.length > max_chars)
    	element.value = element.value.substr(0, max_chars);
}

As javascript, and...

<textarea onkeyup="javascript:limit(this, 80)"></textarea>

As XHTML. Replace 80 with your desired limit. This is how I do it anyway.

Note that this will prevent the user from typing past the limit in the textbox, however the user could still bypass this using javascript of their own. To make sure, you must also check with your server side language.

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Also, my favorite method of circumventing hokey input validation works here too: Mouse paste! – recursive Dec 18 '08 at 16:28
@recursive not if the form also uses onblur="limit(this,80)" – Piskvor Dec 18 '08 at 17:13
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As Javache said, you'll still have to check server side. We've been using the jQuery validator plugin which has support for Max lengths amongst tones of other stuff...

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vote up 2 vote down

The most userfriendly idea seems to me a solution like the Twitter-one. Provide a visual indication that the user has crossed the maximum but don't limit him in typing.

Whatever javscript you use, you will still have to validate at the server end. Users with Javascript disabled will otherwise be able to circumvent your limit.

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