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Html Textarea elements only wrap when they reach a space or tab character. This is fine, until the user types a looooooooooooooooooooooong enough word. I'm looking for a way to strictly enforce line breaks (eg.: even if it results in "loooooooooooo \n ooooooooooong").

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The best I've found is to add a zero-width unicode space after every letter, but this breaks copy and paste operations. Anyone know of a better way?

Note: I'm referring to the "textarea" element here (i.e.: the one that behaves similarly to a text input) - not just a plain old block of text.

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5 Answers

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The CSS settings word-wrap:break-word and text-wrap:unrestricted appear to be CSS 3 features. Good luck finding a way to do this on current implementations.

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just realized Facebook does a pretty good job with their forms, I'll have to get in there and see what they're doing. Either that or wait till browsers support the attributes you mention - breaks my hard to waste a thousand lines of javascript on something that will eventually be so easy – username Mar 4 at 0:12
It won't be long (yeh yeh yeh yeh)! New developer features in Firefox 3.1 "word-wrap: This newly-supported property lets content specify whether or not lines may be broken within words in order to prevent overflow when an otherwise unbreakable string is too long to fit on one line." – username Mar 5 at 22:01
Excellent! I'm glad this is coming together fast; it's such a silly feature to be without. – feonixrift Mar 6 at 6:40
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There's the non-standard element wbr that is supported by at least

Firefox, http://developer.mozilla.org/En/HTML/Element

Internet Explorer, http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms535917(VS.85).aspx

and Opera.

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afaik you can't go inserting html elements inside a textarea, so that won't work – username Feb 28 at 23:43
You're right. But take a look at the revisions ...there was no "textarea" mentioned at this time ;) – VolkerK Mar 1 at 6:48
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I tested the <wbr>, &#8203; and &shy; techniques. All three worked well in IE 7, Firefox 3 and Chrome.

The only one that did not break the copy/paste was the <wbr> tag.

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afaik you can't go inserting html elements inside a textarea, so that won't work – username Feb 28 at 23:44
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According to my tests, only Firefox has the described behavior among current browsers. So I guess your best bet is to wait for the imminent release of Firefox 3.1 to solve your problem :)

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