You can mimic a paste by doing the same thing yourself by hand:
- Optional: trigger when the user tries to paste
- Get the contents of the clipboard (requires permission from user via a pop-up the browser will provide)
- Insert content into the active control
- Optional: trigger the events a real paste would have triggered (for the benefit of any listeners)
Focusing on steps #2 and #3 first, in this example, I check whether the active element is a text input. If so, I simulate a paste by replacing that text box's highlighted content and repositioning the cursor.
function myPaste() {
navigator.clipboard.readText()
.then(clipText => {
const el = document.activeElement;
if (el.nodeName === 'INPUT') {
const newCursorPos = el.selectionStart + clipText.length;
el.value =
el.value.substring(0, el.selectionStart) +
clipText +
el.value.substring(el.selectionEnd);
el.setSelectionRange(newCursorPos, newCursorPos);
}
});
}
For #1, add a listener to intercept the user's paste attempts:
addEventListener("paste", pasteHandler);
function pasteHandler(e) {
e.preventDefault();
myPaste();
}
For #4, add this after el.setSelectionRange(newCursorPos, newCursorPos);
:
el.dispatchEvent(new Event('input'));
el.dispatchEvent(new Event('change'));
Note that if you are using a reactive framework that manipulates the DOM on your behalf based on data binding, you will need to defer the cursor position update until after the next DOM render. For instance:
Vue.nextTick(() => {
el.setSelectionRange(newCursorPos, newCursorPos);
});