234

I want the search box on my web page to display the word "Search" in gray italics. When the box receives focus, it should look just like an empty text box. If there is already text in it, it should display the text normally (black, non-italics). This will help me avoid clutter by removing the label.

BTW, this is an on-page Ajax search, so it has no button.

3
  • 4
    since the question was asked HTML5 placeholder attribute has become supported by all browsers.
    – Jasen
    Aug 20, 2015 at 1:52
  • Hi Michael. Would you be willing to change the accepted answer on this page? There looks to be an clear winner, which is different to the accepted answer.
    – null
    Sep 8, 2016 at 5:36
  • The problem with a JavaScript solution is that not everyone has JavaScript turned on. The placeholder doesn't disappear when the textbox gets focus if using a browser plug-in such as NoScript (very handy for developers to have installed). The Placeholder option is the most robust solution.
    – Sablefoste
    Mar 22, 2017 at 13:06

22 Answers 22

393

Another option, if you're happy to have this feature only for newer browsers, is to use the support offered by HTML 5's placeholder attribute:

<input name="email" placeholder="Email Address">

In the absence of any styles, in Chrome this looks like:

enter image description here

You can try demos out here and in HTML5 Placeholder Styling with CSS.

Be sure to check the browser compatibility of this feature. Support in Firefox was added in 3.7. Chrome is fine. Internet Explorer only added support in 10. If you target a browser that does not support input placeholders, you can use a jQuery plugin called jQuery HTML5 Placeholder, and then just add the following JavaScript code to enable it.

$('input[placeholder], textarea[placeholder]').placeholder();
4
  • @Duke, it works in Fx3.7+, (Safari / Chrome) and Opera. IE9 doesn't support it, so I guess IE8 doesn't either. May 8, 2011 at 11:09
  • Yes I just found out today that FF3.6 doesn't support it. May 8, 2011 at 17:57
  • I think it's moved again. I found it here: github.com/mathiasbynens/jquery-placeholder
    – jocull
    Feb 13, 2013 at 15:03
  • Caveat developer "Internet Explorer 10 and 11 do not show the placeholder when the field is focused, even if the field is empty." Jan 13, 2015 at 17:00
92

That is known as a textbox watermark, and it is done via JavaScript.

or if you use jQuery, a much better approach:

10
  • 4
    That second link is broken. This might be similar: digitalbush.com/projects/watermark-input-plugin May 10, 2009 at 17:11
  • 14
    Found another jQuery approach. this project is hosted @ code.google.com/p/jquery-watermark Aug 17, 2010 at 13:19
  • 4
    The digitalbrush plugin will save the 'watermark' to the database. It is in beta, and has not been updated since 2007. I recommend instead using code.google.com/p/jquery-watermark as @JP suggested. Aug 25, 2010 at 1:34
  • 1
    i think the author of the question should go back and mark @JP comment as the best answer.
    – Randy L
    Sep 30, 2010 at 23:22
  • 2
    The jQuery watermark plugin is pretty noob because it doesn't handle the case where the input is the same as the pre-filled value. In that case, it makes your input text grey again!
    – rxmnnxfpvg
    Oct 27, 2010 at 1:38
42

You can set the placeholder using the placeholder attribute in HTML (browser support). The font-style and color can be changed with CSS (although browser support is limited).

input[type=search]::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* Safari, Chrome(, Opera?) */
 color:gray;
 font-style:italic;
}
input[type=search]:-moz-placeholder { /* Firefox 18- */
 color:gray;
 font-style:italic;
}
input[type=search]::-moz-placeholder { /* Firefox 19+ */
 color:gray;
 font-style:italic;
}
input[type=search]:-ms-input-placeholder { /* IE (10+?) */
 color:gray;
 font-style:italic;
}
<input placeholder="Search" type="search" name="q">

2
  • Was looking for this, ta - further info diveintohtml5.org/forms.html#placeholder
    – David Yell
    Oct 15, 2010 at 9:36
  • 2
    This should now be the accepted answer. The placeholder attribute may not have been widely supported when this was originally posted in 2010, but now it's supported by all current browsers except IE8.
    – JSP64
    Jun 9, 2015 at 1:37
20

You can add and remove a special CSS class and modify the input value onfocus/onblur with JavaScript:

<input type="text" class="hint" value="Search..."
    onfocus="if (this.className=='hint') { this.className = ''; this.value = ''; }"
    onblur="if (this.value == '') { this.className = 'hint'; this.value = 'Search...'; }">

Then specify a hint class with the styling you want in your CSS for example:

input.hint {
    color: grey;
}
1
6

The best way is to wire up your JavaScript events using some kind of JavaScript library like jQuery or YUI and put your code in an external .js-file.

But if you want a quick-and-dirty solution this is your inline HTML-solution:

<input type="text" id="textbox" value="Search"
    onclick="if(this.value=='Search'){this.value=''; this.style.color='#000'}" 
    onblur="if(this.value==''){this.value='Search'; this.style.color='#555'}" />

Updated: Added the requested coloring-stuff.

2
  • This is OK for searches, but in many cases you don't want watermarks to be submitted on any submit event. Aug 25, 2010 at 18:28
  • @k.robinson I +1 that statement. This was the quickest and most compact code at that moment. It could be solved more fine-grained with a javascript code-block. Aug 26, 2010 at 7:44
4

I posted a solution for this on my website some time ago. To use it, import a single .js file:

<script type="text/javascript" src="/hint-textbox.js"></script>

Then annotate whatever inputs you want to have hints with the CSS class hintTextbox:

<input type="text" name="email" value="enter email" class="hintTextbox" />

More information and example are available here.

4
  • 1
    But it is broken. If I input the same text that was the hint, it behaves as if no input was given (if I tab into and then out of it again) Aug 10, 2010 at 19:23
  • 2
    @Stephan: Yes that's the only caveat I know of. Have you actually found that to be an issue in practice? If so then you might have to investigate layering a div above and displaying/hiding it. This is the simplest solution I know of. I also degrades nicely if JavaScript is disabled. Aug 10, 2010 at 22:35
  • I was triggered by the setting of the value. I have a combined need of pre-filling with an existing or default value and a hint when the text box is empty Aug 11, 2010 at 7:46
  • @Stephan - I've actually come across a need for this today and am looking at jQuery plugins. The one linked to in the accepted answer suffers the same problem mine does. Do you know of an alternative? Aug 22, 2010 at 20:51
3

Here's a functional example with Google Ajax library cache and some jQuery magic.

This would be the CSS:

<style type="text/stylesheet" media="screen">
    .inputblank { color:gray; }  /* Class to use for blank input */
</style>

This would would be the JavaScript code:

<script language="javascript"
        type="text/javascript"
        src="http://www.google.com/jsapi">
</script>
<script>
    // Load jQuery
    google.load("jquery", "1");

    google.setOnLoadCallback(function() {
        $("#search_form")
            .submit(function() {
                alert("Submitted. Value= " + $("input:first").val());
                return false;
        });

        $("#keywords")
            .focus(function() {
                if ($(this).val() == 'Search') {
                    $(this)
                    .removeClass('inputblank')
                    .val('');
                }
            })
            .blur(function() {
                if ($(this).val() == '') {
                    $(this)
                    .addClass('inputblank')
                    .val('Search');
                }
            });
    });
</script>

And this would be the HTML:

<form id="search_form">
    <fieldset>
        <legend>Search the site</legend>
            <label for="keywords">Keywords:</label>
        <input id="keywords" type="text" class="inputblank" value="Search"/>
    </fieldset>
</form>

I hope it's enough to make you interested in both the GAJAXLibs and in jQuery.

3

Now it become very easy. In html we can give the placeholder attribute for input elements.

e.g.

<input type="text" name="fst_name" placeholder="First Name"/>

check for more details :http://www.w3schools.com/tags/att_input_placeholder.asp

2

For jQuery users: naspinski's jQuery link seems broken, but try this one: http://remysharp.com/2007/01/25/jquery-tutorial-text-box-hints/

You get a free jQuery plugin tutorial as a bonus. :)

1
  • I use Remy's plugin at tripfootprint.com and it works great; I love that it's simple enough to follow along and grok.
    – Anirvan
    Oct 12, 2010 at 23:58
2

I found the jQuery plugin jQuery Watermark to be better than the one listed in the top answer. Why better? Because it supports password input fields. Also, setting the color of the watermark (or other attributes) is as easy as creating a .watermark reference in your CSS file.

2

This is called "watermark".

I found the jQuery plugin jQuery watermark which, unlike the first answer, does not require extra setup (the original answer also needs a special call to before the form is submitted).

2

Use jQuery Form Notifier - it is one of the most popular jQuery plugins and doesn't suffer from the bugs some of the other jQuery suggestions here do (for example, you can freely style the watermark, without worrying if it will get saved to the database).

jQuery Watermark uses a single CSS style directly on the form elements (I noticed that CSS font-size properties applied to the watermark also affected the text boxes -- not what I wanted). The plus with jQuery Watermark is you can drag-drop text into fields (jQuery Form Notifier doesn't allow this).

Another one suggested by some others (the one at digitalbrush.com), will accidentally submit the watermark value to your form, so I strongly recommend against it.

1

Use a background image to render the text:

 input.foo { }
 input.fooempty { background-image: url("blah.png"); }

Then all you have to do is detect value == 0 and apply the right class:

 <input class="foo fooempty" value="" type="text" name="bar" />

And the jQuery JavaScript code looks like this:

jQuery(function($)
{
    var target = $("input.foo");
    target.bind("change", function()
    {
        if( target.val().length > 1 )
        {
            target.addClass("fooempty");
        }
        else
        {
            target.removeClass("fooempty");
        }
    });
});
1

You could easily have a box read "Search" then when the focus is changed to it have the text be removed. Something like this:

<input onfocus="this.value=''" type="text" value="Search" />

Of course if you do that the user's own text will disappear when they click. So you probably want to use something more robust:

<input name="keyword_" type="text" size="25"  style="color:#999;" maxlength="128" id="keyword_"
onblur="this.value = this.value || this.defaultValue; this.style.color = '#999';"
onfocus="this.value=''; this.style.color = '#000';"
value="Search Term">
1

You can use a attribute called placeholder="" Here's a demo:

<html>
<body>
// try this out!
<input placeholder="This is my placeholder"/>
</body>
</html>

0

When the page first loads, have Search appear in the text box, colored gray if you want it to be.

When the input box receives focus, select all of the text in the search box so that the user can just start typing, which will delete the selected text in the process. This will also work nicely if the user wants to use the search box a second time since they won't have to manually highlight the previous text to delete it.

<input type="text" value="Search" onfocus="this.select();" />
0

I like the solution of "Knowledge Chikuse" - simple and clear. Only need to add a call to blur when the page load is ready which will set the initial state:

$('input[value="text"]').blur();
0

You want to assign something like this to onfocus:

if (this.value == this.defaultValue)
    this.value = ''
this.className = ''

and this to onblur:

if (this.value == '')
    this.value = this.defaultValue
this.className = 'placeholder'

(You can use something a bit cleverer, like a framework function, to do the classname switching if you want.)

With some CSS like this:

input.placeholder{
    color: gray;
    font-style: italic;
}
0

I'm using a simple, one line javascript solution which works great. Here is an example both for textbox and for textarea:

    <textarea onfocus="if (this.value == 'Text') { this.value = ''; }" onblur="if (this.value == '') { this.value = 'Text'; }">Text</textarea>

    <input type="text" value="Text" onfocus="if (this.value == 'Text') { this.value = ''; }" onblur="if (this.value == '') { this.value = 'Text'; }">

only "downside" is to validate at $_POST or in Javascript validation before doing anything with the value of the field. Meaning, checking that the field's value isn't "Text".

-1
$('input[value="text"]').focus(function(){ 
if ($(this).attr('class')=='hint') 
{ 
   $(this).removeClass('hint'); 
   $(this).val(''); 
}
});

$('input[value="text"]').blur(function(){
  if($(this).val() == '')
  {
    $(this).addClass('hint');
    $(this).val($(this).attr('title'));
  } 
});

<input type="text" value="" title="Default Watermark Text">
-1

Simple Html 'required' tag is useful.

<form>
<input type="text" name="test" id="test" required>
<input type="submit" value="enter">
</form>

It specifies that an input field must be filled out before submitting the form or press the button submit. Here is example

1
  • While it is useful, it has nothing to do with the question.
    – Quentin
    Sep 27, 2017 at 11:35
-3

User AJAXToolkit from http://asp.net

0

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