250

I cannot figure out what is wrong with my markup, but the placeholder for the text area will not appear. It seems as though it may be covered up with some blank spaces and tabs. When you focus on the text area and delete from where the cursor puts itself, then leave the text area, the proper placeholder then appears.

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">

<html>
    <head>
    </head>

    <body>

    <form action="message.php" method="post" id="message_form">
        <fieldset>

            <input type="email" name="email" id="email" title="Email address"
                maxlength="40"
                placeholder="Email Address" 
                autocomplete="off" required />
            <br />
            <input type="text" 
                name="subject" 
                id="subject" title="Subject"
                maxlength="60" placeholder="Subject" autocomplete="off" required />
            <br />
            <textarea name="message" 
                id="message" 
                title="Message" 
                cols="30" 
                rows="5" 
                maxlength="100" 
                placeholder="Message" required>
            </textarea>
            <br />
            <input type="submit" value="Send" id="submit"/>

        </fieldset>
    </form>
</body>

<script>

$(document).ready(function() {        
    $('#message_form').html5form({
        allBrowsers : true,
        responseDiv : '#response',
        messages: 'en',
        messages: 'es',
        method : 'GET',
        colorOn :'#d2d2d2',
        colorOff :'#000'
    }
);
});

</script>

</html>
9
  • 2
    Seems to work fine: jsfiddle.net/3BzBk ... Dont place the script outside the body :) Apr 17, 2012 at 7:29
  • 2
    Which browser are you using? Not all browsers support the placeholder attribute
    – Xharze
    Apr 17, 2012 at 7:29
  • You can always use the onfocus and onblur events to get the same effect. Also, you can test if placeholder is supported by the browser or not by using a function like: function placeholderIsSupported() { test = document.createElement('input'); return ('placeholder' in test); }
    – gentrobot
    Apr 17, 2012 at 7:36
  • 1
    @MarcoJohannesen Thank you! I cannot yet tell exactly what is different but it works now. Apr 17, 2012 at 19:54
  • 1
    @user1338065 Super. Was it because it was placed outside the body or? Apr 17, 2012 at 19:55

8 Answers 8

869

This one has always been a gotcha for me and many others. In short, the opening and closing tags for the <textarea> element must be on the same line, otherwise a newline character occupies it. The placeholder will therefore not be displayed since the input area contains content (a newline character is, technically, valid content).

Good:

<textarea></textarea>

Bad:

<textarea>
</textarea>

Update (2020)

This is not true anymore, according to the HTML5 parsing spec:

If the next token is a U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character token, 
then ignore that token and move on to the next one. (Newlines 
at the start of textarea elements are ignored as an authoring 
convenience.)

You might still have trouble if you editor insists on ending lines with CRLF, though.

11
  • If the plugin was edited, you can fix this issue using jQuery's .trim method.
    – SpYk3HH
    Sep 19, 2013 at 13:26
  • An example, would be to simply add a piece to JS (before or after plugin call, doesn't matter) that looks like the following: $('textarea'),each(function(i) { if ($.trim($(this).text()) == '') $(this).text('').trigger('blur'); });
    – SpYk3HH
    Sep 19, 2013 at 13:36
  • Also, when creating a new textarea element after the DOM is loaded, make sure to include the closing tag /> instead of >. Example: $('body').html('<textarea placeholder="test" />');
    – degenerate
    Jan 20, 2015 at 16:09
  • 4
    if there is a whitespace inside the <textarea> it means that the textarea isn't empty, so, there is no use for a placeholder. :)
    – Edu Ruiz
    Dec 16, 2015 at 14:06
  • any idea how i make sure the textarea always has enough lines for "overflow" or excessive input? i.e. how can i make the rows increase as the input increases?
    – oldboy
    Jan 29, 2020 at 6:22
71

Delete all spaces and line breaks between <textarea> opening and closing </textarea> tags.

<textarea placeholder="YOUR TEXT"></textarea>  ///Correct one

<textarea placeholder="YOUR TEXT"> </textarea>  ///Bad one It's treats as a value so browser won't display the Placeholder value

<textarea placeholder="YOUR TEXT"> 
</textarea>  ///Bad one 
2
  • 1
    The space kills it? Weird. Sep 7, 2016 at 16:13
  • 4
    It treats space as a value. Sep 8, 2016 at 6:24
12

its because there is a space somewhere. I was using jsfiddle and there was a space after the tag. After I deleted the space it started working

1
  • Wow! I had the closing textarea tag on the next line, indented 4 spaces > those invisible spaces are in the textarea, but I didn't realize that until I tried to use placeholder. No spaces between the opening and closing textarea tags!
    – DOK
    Sep 11, 2012 at 16:03
5

Well, technically it does not have to be on the same line as long as there is no character between the ending ">" from start tag and the starting "<" from the closing tag. That is you need to end with ...></textarea> as in the example below:

<p><label>Comments:<br>
       <textarea id = "comments" rows = "4" cols = "36" 
            placeholder = "Enter comments here"
            class = "valid"></textarea>
    </label>
</p>
4

I know this post has been (very well) answered by Aquarelle but just in case somebody is having this issue with other tag forms with no text such as inputs i'll leave this here:

If you have an input in your form and placeholder is not showing because a white space at the beginning, this may be caused for you "value" attribute. In case you are using variables to fill the value of an input check that there are no white spaces between the commas and the variables.

example using twig for php framework symfony :

<input type="text" name="subject" value="{{ subject }}" placeholder="hello" />       <-- this is ok
<input type="text" name="subject" value" {{ subject }} " placeholder="hello" />      <-- this will not show placeholder 

In this case the tag between {{ }} is the variable, just make sure you are not leaving spaces between the commas because white space is also a valid character.

3

use <textarea></textarea> instead of leaving a space between the opening and closing tags as <textarea> </textarea>

1
  • 7
    This adds nothing that the existing answers don't already address. May 27, 2015 at 18:48
1

Between the opening and closing tag in our case textarea tag shouldn't be space or newline character or any text(value).

If there's space, newline character or any text, it's considered as value which overrides placeholder.

    **PlaceHolder Appears**
    <textarea placeholder="Am Default Message"></textarea>

    **PlaceHolder Doesn't Appear**

    <textarea placeholder="Am Default Message">  </textarea>
   <textarea placeholder="Am Default Message"> 
   </textarea>
   <textarea placeholder="Am Default Message">Something</textarea>
0

I had the same issue, only using a .pug file (similar to .jade). I realized that it was also a space issue, following the end of my closing parentheses. In my example, you need to highlight the text after (placeholder="YOUR MESSAGE") to see:

BEFORE:

form.form-horizontal(method='POST')
  .form-group
    textarea.form-control(placeholder="YOUR MESSAGE") 
  .form-group  
    button.btn.btn-primary(type='submit') SUBMIT

AFTER:

form.form-horizontal(method='POST')
  .form-group
    textarea.form-control(placeholder="YOUR MESSAGE")
  .form-group  
    button.btn.btn-primary(type='submit') SUBMIT

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