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I'm looking for a way to make a numeric-only (or extensively, something that would work with multiple types of validators on the fly) so far I have something like:

this.ContentEditable.bind("keydown", this, function (event) {
    if ((event.data.NumericOnly === true) && (event.which != 8) && (event.which != 189) && (event.which != 190)) {
        var c = String.fromCharCode(event.which);
        if ('0123456789'.indexOf(c) < 0) { return (false); }
    }
});

The caveat with this method being that if a user has already typed a "." (character 190, String.fromCharCode doesn't work with it, character 8 is backspace) or a "-" (character 189) is duplicated and/or anywhere but the first character in the contenteditable=true's text it should be viewed as invalid. I could get the text and cancel the input with return (false); if it already contains a "." and a "." is being typed or check if the cursor is at position zero for a "-" with none already existing in the contenteditable=true's text, but I'd like something more extensible.

Is it possible to get the final result of the key event so I can send it off to a validator while I still have the option to cancel the key event?

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  • I'd personally do it in the lazy way - every time the user inputs something (.on('input', fn) for modern browsers) try to evaluate it to a number, if it fails restore to the previous value (possibly through some .data() hackery if event.preventDefault() doesn't do it). Apr 3, 2013 at 21:57
  • @FabrícioMatté: The problem there being that the cursor position gets screwed up. Apr 3, 2013 at 22:02
  • @T.J.Crowder I did a patch for that which saves the element.selectionStart and selectionEnd and takes in consideration how many characters were removed before the selectionStart before setting it back, and the chars removed before selectionEnd before setting it back as well. Mine is a little too ugly as when I tested, Chrome fired the input event before moving the cursor while Firefox does it after, which requires some hackery to get a nice cross-browser behavior. And I didn't even attempt to make it work on old IE. Apr 3, 2013 at 22:06
  • @FabrícioMatté: LOL! Sounds like a lot of "fun." :-) Apr 3, 2013 at 22:10
  • @T.J.Crowder Yes it was. ;) basically, I used a setTimeout(fn, 0) inside the input handler so that both browsers would have moved the cursor to after the inputted character(s). I'll make a repo for it if I ever get it working in IE8 (well, up to IE10's input and propertychanged events do not fire for backspace/erased characters so the behavior would still be inconsistent..) Apr 3, 2013 at 22:13

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