First things first. I prefer showing the invalid keystrokes rather than preventing them. User Experience Stack Exchange seems to agree at the moment (see this question).
That said, not everyone agrees, so let's see what we can do.
Second. This doesn't replace a validation step. There are certain valid keystroke combinations that are not valid numbers, but need to be permitted in order to enter valid numbers. For example, the user could type a decimal mark (full stop or comma, depending on the language they are using), and then leave the text box, and you don't have a valid number. The following strings are all starts of numbers, but not yet valid:
The first two are the start of .5 or -.5, while the last two are the same in the various languages that use a comma instead of a full stop for the decimal mark.
This brings us to the (already rejected)
<input type="number" step="any">
Of course, you will have to include a JavaScript script to fix non-modern browsers, but those are available. In theory, these should also work correctly when the user works in a language that uses the comma instead of the full stop for the decimal mark. Even better, since users usually use only one browser, and since they will be used to how input number works in that browser, and since they will spend most of their time on other websites than yours, they may get confused if your website does not behave the same way they are used to.
But maybe you still want to make your own solution. If all else fails, I would go with a regular expression (yes, I know, I now have two problems). I don't believe in allowing spaces, so I limit it to a negative sign, digits, and one decimal mark (whichever they are using). For example:
$('.rational-number').on('keypress', function(e)
{
if (e.charCode >= 32 && e.charCode < 127 &&
!/^-?\d*[.,]?\d*$/.test(this.value + '' + String.fromCharCode(e.charCode)))
{
return false;
}
})
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type-"text" class="rational-number">
This ALMOST works. The only problem I now have is, it assumes any character you type goes at the end of the string. This is fine except for the '-' for negative numbers, which is only allowed at the beginning. So you can type -5.4, but if you type 5.4 and then hit the home key or left arrow back to the beginning, it won't let you make it negative.
It also won't deal with pasting. Paste is a complicated topic. I don't agree with rejecting all paste operations. I feel the best option here is to just let the user paste and let the validator pick up any invalid numbers.