657

It seems the minlength attribute for an <input> field doesn't work.

Is there any other attribute in HTML with the help of which I can set the minimal length of a value for fields?

4

21 Answers 21

1407

You can use the pattern attribute. The required attribute is also needed, otherwise an input field with an empty value will be excluded from constraint validation.

<input pattern=".{3,}"   required title="3 characters minimum">
<input pattern=".{5,10}" required title="5 to 10 characters">

If you want to create the option to use the pattern for "empty, or minimum length", you could do the following:

<input pattern=".{0}|.{5,10}" required title="Either 0 OR (5 to 10 chars)">
<input pattern=".{0}|.{8,}"   required title="Either 0 OR (8 chars minimum)">
21
  • 146
    +1 for using html5 instead of jQuery. I just wanted to add that the title attribute allows you to set the message to display to the user if the pattern is not met. Otherwise a default message will be shown.
    – None
    Aug 30, 2012 at 22:46
  • 12
    @J.Money It still says "Please match the requested format: <title>". Is there a way to bypass the prior default message?
    – CᴴᴀZ
    Oct 1, 2013 at 7:52
  • 61
    Unfortunately this is not supported for textareas. Nov 15, 2013 at 23:35
  • 28
    @ChaZ @Basj You can add a custom error message by adding the following attribute: oninvalid="this.setCustomValidity('Your message')"
    – bigtex777
    Nov 26, 2014 at 20:31
  • 10
    If you enters an invalid input and you're using setCustomValidity, then it will continue to show you the error message even after you corrected the input. You can use the following onchange method to counter this. oninvalid="this.setCustomValidity('Field must contain min. 5 characters')" onchange="try{setCustomValidity('')}catch(e){}"
    – sohaiby
    Oct 24, 2015 at 8:56
172

There is a minlength property in the HTML5 specification now, as well as the validity.tooShort interface.

Both are now enabled in recent versions of all modern browsers. For details, see https://caniuse.com/#search=minlength.

1
  • 2
    I see this, but still it is not working for me. I have required set as well, but still not validating against the minlength. not sure why.
    – ggedde
    Jun 23, 2022 at 19:48
24

Here is HTML5-only solution (if you want minlength 5, maxlength 10 character validation)

http://jsfiddle.net/xhqsB/102/

    <form>
      <input pattern=".{5,10}">
      <input type="submit" value="Check"></input>
    </form>

5
  • 3
    How to set a custom error message if the field is not Ok?
    – Basj
    Oct 7, 2014 at 20:47
  • 2
    For custom message add title attribute with the required message. Jun 13, 2015 at 11:57
  • 8
    The same pattern answer has been given a few months earlier. How is this answer better? Sep 1, 2015 at 0:58
  • @DanDascalescu He didn't have form tags and a clear explanation. I also included a working jsfiddle demo. (btw Stackoverflow rules say that it's not forbidden to give similar answers as long as it's helpful to the community) Jan 27, 2019 at 13:55
  • One way to give an even better answer is to include the demo here on SO as a runnable code snippet. Jan 27, 2019 at 21:15
12

Yes, there it is. It's like maxlength. W3.org documentation: http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/forms.html#attr-fe-minlength

In case minlength doesn't work, use the pattern attribute as mentioned by @Pumbaa80 for the input tag.

For textarea: For setting max; use maxlength and for min go to this link.

You will find here both for max and min.

12

I used maxlength and minlength with or without required and it worked for me very well for HTML5.

<input id="passcode" type="password" minlength="8" maxlength="10">

`

6

minlength attribute is now widely supported in most of the browsers.

<input type="text" minlength="2" required>

But, as with other HTML5 features, IE11 is missing from this panorama. So, if you have a wide IE11 user base, consider using the pattern HTML5 attribute that is supported almost across the board in most browsers (including IE11).

To have a nice and uniform implementation and maybe extensible or dynamic (based on the framework that generate your HTML), I would vote for the pattern attribute:

<input type="text" pattern=".{2,}" required>

There is still a small usability catch when using pattern. The user will see a non-intuitive (very generic) error/warning message when using pattern. See this jsfiddle or below:

<h3>In each form type 1 character and press submit</h3>
</h2>
<form action="#">
  Input with minlength: <input type="text" minlength="2" required name="i1">
  <input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
<br>
<form action="#">
  Input with patern: <input type="text" pattern=".{2,}" required name="i1">
  <input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>

For example, in Chrome (but similar in most browsers), you will get the following error messages:

Please lengthen this text to 2 characters or more (you are currently using 1 character)

by using minlength and

Please match the format requested

by using pattern.

5

I notice that sometimes in Chrome when autofill is on and the fields are field by the autofill browser build in method, it bypasses the minlength validation rules, so in this case you will have to disable autofill by the following attribute:

autocomplete="off"

<input autocomplete="new-password" name="password" id="password" type="password" placeholder="Password" maxlength="12" minlength="6" required />
0
5

The minLength attribute (unlike maxLength) does not exist natively in HTML5. However, there a some ways to validate a field if it contains less than x characters.

An example is given using jQuery at this link: http://docs.jquery.com/Plugins/Validation/Methods/minlength

<html>
    <head>
        <script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-latest.js"></script>
        <script type="text/javascript" src="http://jzaefferer.github.com/jquery-validation/jquery.validate.js"></script>
        <script type="text/javascript">
            jQuery.validator.setDefaults({
                debug: true,
                success: "valid"
            });;
        </script>

        <script>
            $(document).ready(function(){
                $("#myform").validate({
                    rules: {
                        field: {
                            required: true,
                            minlength: 3
                        }
                    }
                });
            });
        </script>
    </head>

    <body>
        <form id="myform">
            <label for="field">Required, Minimum length 3: </label>
            <input class="left" id="field" name="field" />
            <br/>
            <input type="submit" value="Validate!" />
        </form>
    </body>

</html>
0
5

Not HTML5, but practical anyway: if you happen to use AngularJS, you can use ng-minlength (or data-ng-minlength) for both inputs and textareas. See also this Plunk.

0
4

My solution for textarea using jQuery and combining HTML5 required validation to check the minimum length.

minlength.js

$(document).ready(function(){
  $('form textarea[minlength]').on('keyup', function(){
    e_len = $(this).val().trim().length
    e_min_len = Number($(this).attr('minlength'))
    message = e_min_len <= e_len ? '' : e_min_len + ' characters minimum'
    this.setCustomValidity(message)
  })
})

HTML

<form action="">
  <textarea name="test_min_length" id="" cols="30" rows="10" minlength="10"></textarea>
</form>
0
4

See http://caniuse.com/#search=minlength. Some browsers may not support this attribute.


If the value of the "type" is one of them:

text, email, search, password, tel, or URL (warning: not include number | no browser support "tel" now - 2017.10)

Use the minlength(/ maxlength) attribute. It specifies the minimum number of characters.

For example,

<input type="text" minlength="11" maxlength="11" pattern="[0-9]*" placeholder="input your phone number">

Or use the "pattern" attribute:

<input type="text" pattern="[0-9]{11}" placeholder="input your phone number">

If the "type" is number, although minlength(/ maxlength) is not be supported, you can use the min(/ max) attribute instead of it.

For example,

<input type="number" min="100" max="999" placeholder="input a three-digit number">
2

New version:

It extends the use (textarea and input) and fixes bugs.

// Author: Carlos Machado
// Version: 0.2
// Year: 2015
window.onload = function() {
    function testFunction(evt) {
        var items = this.elements;
        for (var j = 0; j < items.length; j++) {
            if ((items[j].tagName == "INPUT" || items[j].tagName == "TEXTAREA") && items[j].hasAttribute("minlength")) {
                if (items[j].value.length < items[j].getAttribute("minlength") && items[j].value != "") {
                    items[j].setCustomValidity("The minimum number of characters is " + items[j].getAttribute("minlength") + ".");
                    items[j].focus();
                    evt.defaultPrevented;
                    return;
                }
                else {
                    items[j].setCustomValidity('');
                }
            }
        }
    }
    var isOpera = !!window.opera || navigator.userAgent.indexOf(' OPR/') >= 0;
    var isChrome = !!window.chrome && !isOpera;
    if(!isChrome) {
        var forms = document.getElementsByTagName("form");
        for(var i = 0; i < forms.length; i++) {
            forms[i].addEventListener('submit', testFunction,true);
            forms[i].addEventListener('change', testFunction,true);
        }
    }
}
2
  • Thanks for this elegant updated solution. Does it work outside of Chrome/Opera since they don't support minlength? caniuse.com/#search=minlength I just tested it on Mac Safari and it doesn't work :( I see you are adding the eventListener for non Chrome/Opera browsers, so maybe I am doing something wrong.
    – rmcsharry
    Oct 13, 2016 at 14:05
  • After debugging Safari it seems that var items = this.elements; is returning the FORMS collection, not the items in the form. Weird.
    – rmcsharry
    Oct 13, 2016 at 14:50
2

Following @user123444555621 pinned answer.

There is a minlength attribute in HTML5 but for some reason it may not always work as expected.

I had a case where my input type text did not obey the minlength="3" property.

By using the pattern attribute I managed to fix my problem. Here's an example of using pattern to ensure minlength validation:

const folderNameInput = document.getElementById("folderName");

folderNameInput.addEventListener('focus', setFolderNameValidityMessage);
folderNameInput.addEventListener('input', setFolderNameValidityMessage);

function setFolderNameValidityMessage() {
  if (folderNameInput.validity.patternMismatch || folderNameInput.validity.valueMissing) {
      folderNameInput.setCustomValidity('The folder name must contain between 3 and 50 chars');
  } else {
      folderNameInput.setCustomValidity('');
  }
}
:root {
  --color-main-red: rgb(230, 0, 0);
  --color-main-green: rgb(95, 255, 143);
}

form input {
  border: 1px solid black;
  outline: none;
}

form input:invalid:focus {
  border-bottom-color: var(--color-main-red);
  box-shadow: 0 2px 0 0 var(--color-main-red);
}

form input:not(:invalid):focus {
  border-bottom-color: var(--color-main-green);
  box-shadow: 0 2px 0 0 var(--color-main-green);
}
<form>
  <input
    type="text"
    id="folderName"
    placeholder="Your folder name"
    spellcheck="false"
    autocomplete="off"
    
    required
    minlength="3"
    maxlength="50"
    pattern=".{3,50}"
  />
  <button type="submit" value="Create folder">Create folder</button>
</form>

For further details, here's the MDN link to the HTML pattern attribute: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Attributes/pattern

1

I wrote this JavaScript code, [minlength.js]:

window.onload = function() {
    function testaFunction(evt) {
        var elementos = this.elements;
        for (var j = 0; j < elementos.length; j++) {
            if (elementos[j].tagName == "TEXTAREA" && elementos[j].hasAttribute("minlength")) {
                if (elementos[j].value.length < elementos[j].getAttribute("minlength")) {
                    alert("The textarea control must be at least " + elementos[j].getAttribute("minlength") + " characters.");
                    evt.preventDefault();
                };
            }
        }
    }
    var forms = document.getElementsByTagName("form");
    for(var i = 0; i < forms.length; i++) {
        forms[i].addEventListener('submit', testaFunction, true);
    }
}
1

In my case, in which I validate the most manually and using Firefox (43.0.4), minlength and validity.tooShort are not available unfortunately.

Since I only need to have minimum lengths stored to proceed, an easy and handy way is to assign this value to another valid attribute of the input tag. In that case then, you can use min, max, and step properties from [type="number"] inputs.

Rather than storing those limits in an array it's easier to find it stored in the same input instead of getting the element id to match the array index.

1

I used max and min then required, and it worked for me very well, but what am not sure is if it is a but coding method.

<input type="text" maxlength="13" name ="idnumber" class="form-control"  minlength="13" required>
1
  • 1
    What do you mean by "a but coding method"? Aug 19, 2020 at 11:04
1

If desired to make this behavior, always show a small prefix on the input field or the user can't erase a prefix:

   // prefix="prefix_text"
   // If the user changes the prefix, restore the input with the prefix:
   if(document.getElementById('myInput').value.substring(0,prefix.length).localeCompare(prefix))
       document.getElementById('myInput').value = prefix;
0

You can use minlength in input tag or you can regex pattern to check the number of character or even you can take the input and check the length of the character and then you can restrict based upon your requirement.

0

Smartest Way for maxlength

$("html").on("keydown keyup change", "input", function(){
    var maxlength=$(this).attr('maxlength');    
    if(maxlength){  
        var value=$(this).val();
        if(value.length<=maxlength){
            $(this).attr('v',value);
        }
        else{
            $(this).val($(this).attr('v'));
        }   
    }
});     
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" maxlength="10">

1
  • If you have a new question, please ask it by clicking the Ask Question button. Include a link to this question if it helps provide context. - From Review
    – Ethan
    Apr 12, 2022 at 1:15
0

I've used the follow tag with numbers:

<input type="tel" class="form-control" name="Extension" id="Extension" required maxlength="4" minlength="4" placeholder="4 Digits" />
-4

Add both a maximum and a minimum value. You can specify the range of allowed values:

<input type="number" min="1" max="999" />
0

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