19

I have a textarea in which the user can enter text in english (or any other left-to-right language) or in a language that is RTL.

When the user writes in RTL, the user must press Right-shift + ctrl in order to make the text be aligned to the right and be rtl. However, in windows (and probably other modern OSes) the user can set any key combination to switch language and text direction.

I know how to display text as RTL, but how will I know which direction to display?

Is there a way to detect that the text typed in a textarea/text-field was typed as RTL?

8
  • there are specific characters in unicode used to indicate the text direction in so called BiDi mode, but is it applicable in your case I don't know.
    – didierc
    Dec 5, 2012 at 20:41
  • are those characters included in the actual text saved in the textarea? Dec 5, 2012 at 20:43
  • I suppose that in most cases, UI force users to use the english alphabet when necessary, and offer specific fields in form for language specific inputs, so that no detection code is necessary.
    – didierc
    Dec 5, 2012 at 20:44
  • I don't know if inputs handle that. I suppose they do if the input value contains mixed text, but otherwise I cannot tell.
    – didierc
    Dec 5, 2012 at 20:46
  • you could probably setup an event handler on text change in your textarea which looks for these characters, and test it out if you have a OS supporting BiDi.
    – didierc
    Dec 5, 2012 at 20:51

3 Answers 3

42

I've come up to a more simple and nice solution. Just add dir="auto" to the elements and the browser will do it's job!

See: http://www.w3schools.com/tags/att_global_dir.asp

7
  • Hey, thanks. I am aware of that solution, it is still quite new, and not all browsers implement it well (firefox 22 began handling it) Nov 20, 2013 at 15:12
  • Thanks, good to know. It would be also nice to come up with a support table, so if someone finds one, please let me know!
    – s3v3n
    Nov 20, 2013 at 15:27
  • you can see the summary table in w3.org/International/tests/html5/the-dir-attribute/… Mar 6, 2014 at 10:57
  • 2
    It's not supported in IE 11 Sep 26, 2015 at 5:09
  • 1
    Awesome Tested in cordova apps and working like a charm Jul 26, 2016 at 9:09
13

Try this:

var rtl_rx = /[\u0591-\u07FF]/;
$('textarea').on('keyup',function(){
    this.style.direction = rtl_rx.test(this.value) ? 'rtl' : 'ltr';
});

I used a simplified RegExp to detect RTL

/[\u0591-\u07FF]/

Though it will not catch each and every RTL character in the Unicode table, it probably covers all real life cases. It includes all normal Hebrew and Arabic characters, including vowelization characters.

1
  • 1
    just use dir="auto"
    – M00HY
    Mar 25, 2020 at 14:44
1

You can write a quick little JavaScript/jQuery code using regular expressions. Regular expressions are limited in JavaScript though, so you will need to use the XRegExp library which has full Unicode support - if you add the plugins. Then you can check the characters to see what block of Unicodes they belong to with expressions like this \p{Hebrew}. http://www.regular-expressions.info/unicode.html

Faced with the same dilemma I wrote myself a function that loops through the characters in each string and counts the number of occurrences of Hebrew characters (my site is bilingual Yiddish/English). Then the string gets a score, and an 'rtl' class is applied to the elements with a high score. You could easily add all of the RTL languages in Unicode to the for loop to make this more generic.

http://jsfiddle.net/Swyu4/9/

Please note the External Resources linking to the XRegExp libraries in the jsfiddle.

$('p').each(function() {
    if(isRTL($(this).text()))
        $(this).addClass('rtl');
});

function isRTL(str) {
    var isHebrew = XRegExp('[\\p{Hebrew}]');
    var isLatin = XRegExp('[\\p{Latin}]');
    var partLatin = 0;
    var partHebrew = 0;
    var rtlIndex = 0;
    var isRTL = false;

    for(i=0;i<str.length;i++){
        if(isLatin.test(str[i]))
            partLatin++;
        if(isHebrew.test(str[i]))
            partHebrew++;
    }
    rtlIndex = partHebrew/(partLatin + partHebrew);
    if(rtlIndex > .5) {
        isRTL = true;
    }
/*
console.log('Latin score: ' + partLatin);
console.log('Hebrew score: ' + partHebrew);
console.log('trlIndex score: ' + rtlIndex);
console.log('isRTL: ' + isRTL);
*/

    return isRTL;
}

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