91

I want to trigger an event just after I stop typing (not while typing) characters in my input textbox.

I've tried with:

$('input#username').keypress(function() {
    var _this = $(this); // copy of this object for further usage

    setTimeout(function() {
        $.post('/ajax/fetch', {
            type: 'username',
            value: _this.val()
        }, function(data) {
            if(!data.success) {
                // continue working
            } else {
                // throw an error
            }
        }, 'json');
    }, 3000);
});

But this example produces a timeout for every typed character and I get about 20 AJAX requests if I type-in 20 characters.

On this fiddle I demonstrate the same problem with a simple alert instead of an AJAX.

Is there a solution for this or I'm just using a bad approach for this?

6
  • 1
    I am afraid that javascript doesn't provide an event that would allow you to be notified when the user stops typing into an input field. Why do you need that? Dec 26, 2012 at 14:51
  • 3
    isn't it obvious from the example? I want to trigger an event "when the end-user stops typing in it", instead of sending 20 requests
    – user1386320
    Dec 26, 2012 at 14:52
  • 1
    There is no way to tell when the user is actually done typing unless they manually submit or change fields. How are you to know if the user pauses mid sentence and waits for 5 minutes before typing more? A possible solution would be to use .blur() and send when the users focus leaves the field.
    – Kevin M
    Dec 26, 2012 at 14:53
  • 15
    The comments above are silly. This is a common use case: I want one event when the user is done resizing their window, zooming the map, dragging, typing... basically any continuous action on the user's part needs to be translated into our digital universe. Even a single keystroke suffers from this problem: when you strike a key, it actually "bounces", creating not just 1 keystroke event, but many. The hardware or OS of your computer removes these extra events, and that's why we have the illusion of discrete keystroke events. This is called "debouncing", and this is what the OP needs.
    – Ziggy
    Nov 6, 2013 at 9:40
  • warning for react users: stackoverflow.com/a/28046731/57883
    – Maslow
    Dec 8, 2016 at 22:32

13 Answers 13

174

You'll have to use a setTimeout (like you are) but also store the reference so you can keep resetting the limit. Something like:

//
// $('#element').donetyping(callback[, timeout=1000])
// Fires callback when a user has finished typing. This is determined by the time elapsed
// since the last keystroke and timeout parameter or the blur event--whichever comes first.
//   @callback: function to be called when even triggers
//   @timeout:  (default=1000) timeout, in ms, to to wait before triggering event if not
//              caused by blur.
// Requires jQuery 1.7+
//
;(function($){
    $.fn.extend({
        donetyping: function(callback,timeout){
            timeout = timeout || 1e3; // 1 second default timeout
            var timeoutReference,
                doneTyping = function(el){
                    if (!timeoutReference) return;
                    timeoutReference = null;
                    callback.call(el);
                };
            return this.each(function(i,el){
                var $el = $(el);
                // Chrome Fix (Use keyup over keypress to detect backspace)
                // thank you @palerdot
                $el.is(':input') && $el.on('keyup keypress paste',function(e){
                    // This catches the backspace button in chrome, but also prevents
                    // the event from triggering too preemptively. Without this line,
                    // using tab/shift+tab will make the focused element fire the callback.
                    if (e.type=='keyup' && e.keyCode!=8) return;
                    
                    // Check if timeout has been set. If it has, "reset" the clock and
                    // start over again.
                    if (timeoutReference) clearTimeout(timeoutReference);
                    timeoutReference = setTimeout(function(){
                        // if we made it here, our timeout has elapsed. Fire the
                        // callback
                        doneTyping(el);
                    }, timeout);
                }).on('blur',function(){
                    // If we can, fire the event since we're leaving the field
                    doneTyping(el);
                });
            });
        }
    });
})(jQuery);

$('#example').donetyping(function(){
  $('#example-output').text('Event last fired @ ' + (new Date().toUTCString()));
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

<input type="text" id="example" />
<p id="example-output">Nothing yet</p>

That will execute when:

  1. The timeout has elapsed, or
  2. The user switched fields (blur event)

(Whichever comes first)

15
  • 2
    @Brad: This jquery solution works fine except the backspace key typed in the input box is not detected in the latest chrome(38.0.2125.111). Only changing it to keyup works. You might want to inspect this and modify the code appropriately.
    – palerdot
    Oct 30, 2014 at 9:21
  • 3
    Thanks for this plugin - works great. I had to make one adjustment, because it wouldnt work when someone pasted something into the input field. I edited the following line to include paste -- $el.is(':input') && $el.on('keyup keypress paste',function(e){
    – Matt
    Dec 30, 2014 at 18:29
  • 1
    @Sangar82: Should now (though I'm a little confused, ctrl+v should be captured by keypress--unless you're right-click->pasting? Jan 12, 2016 at 21:01
  • 1
    @BradChristie Not working on Android Chrome in general or on desktop Chrome if text is deleted with DEL-Key
    – rwx
    Jun 5, 2017 at 14:49
  • 1
    @KenIngram semicolon is in case it's minified with other modules it avoids invalid statements (fron incomplete previous scripts). As for context, it extends the jQuery library to add a donetyping extension method (similar to .click from previous iterations of jquery (before .on(click', ...) become the standard). Hope that helps. Sep 22, 2017 at 19:23
81

SOLUTION:

Here is the solution. Executing a function after the user has stopped typing for a specified amount of time:

var delay = (function(){
  var timer = 0;
  return function(callback, ms){
  clearTimeout (timer);
  timer = setTimeout(callback, ms);
 };
})();

Usage

$('input').keyup(function() {
  delay(function(){
    alert('Hi, func called');
  }, 1000 );
});
2
  • Can someone explain to me how this works? Seems like Immediately Invoked Function Expression bit is the main thing here, but I don't think I understand what's happening.
    – NulisDefo
    Nov 5, 2021 at 14:10
  • Wait a sec... Is this set up as IIFE just to set up the timer variable in a contained way (as opposed to separately outside the delay variable? And following that the rest is just a normal Function Expression?
    – NulisDefo
    Nov 5, 2021 at 15:16
17

You can use underscore.js "debounce"

$('input#username').keypress( _.debounce( function(){<your ajax call here>}, 500 ) );

This means that your function call will execute after 500ms of pressing a key. But if you press another key (another keypress event is fired) before the 500ms, the previous function execution will be ignored (debounced) and the new one will execute after a fresh 500ms timer.

For extra info, using _.debounce(func,timer,true) would mean that the first function will execute and all other keypress events withing subsequent 500ms timers would be ignored.

0
10

You need debounce!

Here is a jQuery plugin, and here is all you need to know about debounce. If you are coming here from Google and Underscore has found its way into the JSoup of your app, it has debounce baked right in!

10

You should assign setTimeout to a variable and use clearTimeout to clear it on keypress.

var timer = '';

$('input#username').keypress(function() {
  clearTimeout(timer);
  timer = setTimeout(function() {
    //Your code here
  }, 3000); //Waits for 3 seconds after last keypress to execute the above lines of code
});

Fiddle

Hope this helps.

7

cleaned solution :

$.fn.donetyping = function(callback, delay){
  delay || (delay = 1000);
  var timeoutReference;
  var doneTyping = function(elt){
    if (!timeoutReference) return;
    timeoutReference = null;
    callback(elt);
  };

  this.each(function(){
    var self = $(this);
    self.on('keyup',function(){
      if(timeoutReference) clearTimeout(timeoutReference);
      timeoutReference = setTimeout(function(){
        doneTyping(self);
      }, delay);
    }).on('blur',function(){
      doneTyping(self);
    });
  });

  return this;
};
3

There is some simple plugin I've made that does exacly that. It requires much less code than proposed solutions and it's very light (~0,6kb)

First you create Bid object than can be bumped anytime. Every bump will delay firing Bid callback for next given ammount of time.

var searchBid = new Bid(function(inputValue){
    //your action when user will stop writing for 200ms. 
    yourSpecialAction(inputValue);
}, 200); //we set delay time of every bump to 200ms

When Bid object is ready, we need to bump it somehow. Let's attach bumping to keyup event.

$("input").keyup(function(){
    searchBid.bump( $(this).val() ); //parameters passed to bump will be accessable in Bid callback
});

What happens here is:

Everytime user presses key, bid is 'delayed' (bumped) for next 200ms. If 200ms will pass without beeing 'bumped' again, callback will be fired.

Also, you've got 2 additional functions for stopping bid (if user pressed esc or clicked outside input for example) and for finishing and firing callback immediately (for example when user press enter key):

searchBid.stop();
searchBid.finish(valueToPass);
1

I've been searching for a simple HTML/JS code and I did not found any. Then, I wrote the code below using onkeyup="DelayedSubmission()".

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="pt-br" lang="pt-br">
<head><title>Submit after typing finished</title>
<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
function DelayedSubmission() {
    var date = new Date();
    initial_time = date.getTime();
    if (typeof setInverval_Variable == 'undefined') {
            setInverval_Variable = setInterval(DelayedSubmission_Check, 50);
    } 
}
function DelayedSubmission_Check() {
    var date = new Date();
    check_time = date.getTime();
    var limit_ms=check_time-initial_time;
    if (limit_ms > 800) { //Change value in milliseconds
        alert("insert your function"); //Insert your function
        clearInterval(setInverval_Variable);
        delete setInverval_Variable;
    }
}

</script>
</head>
<body>

<input type="search" onkeyup="DelayedSubmission()" id="field_id" style="WIDTH: 100px; HEIGHT: 25px;" />

</body>
</html>
1

We can use useDebouncedCallback to perform this task in react.

import { useDebouncedCallback } from 'use-debounce'; - install npm packge for same if not installed

const [searchText, setSearchText] = useState('');

const onSearchTextChange = value => {
    setSearchText(value);
  };

//call search api
  const [debouncedOnSearch] = useDebouncedCallback(searchIssues, 500);
  useEffect(() => {
    debouncedOnSearch(searchText);
  }, [searchText, debouncedOnSearch]);
0

why do that much when you just want to reset a clock ?

var clockResetIndex = 0 ;
// this is the input we are tracking
var tarGetInput = $('input#username');

tarGetInput.on( 'keyup keypress paste' , ()=>{
    // reset any privious clock:
    if (clockResetIndex !== 0) clearTimeout(clockResetIndex);

    // set a new clock ( timeout )
    clockResetIndex = setTimeout(() => {
        // your code goes here :
        console.log( new Date() , tarGetInput.val())
    }, 1000);
});

if you are working on wordpress , then you need to wrap all this code inside an jQuery block :

jQuery(document).ready(($) => {
    /**
     * @name 'navSearch' 
     * @version 1.0
     * Created on: 2018-08-28 17:59:31
     * GMT+0530 (India Standard Time)
     * @author : ...
     * @description ....
     */
        var clockResetIndex = 0 ;
        // this is the input we are tracking
        var tarGetInput = $('input#username');

        tarGetInput.on( 'keyup keypress paste' , ()=>{
            // reset any privious clock:
            if (clockResetIndex !== 0) clearTimeout(clockResetIndex);

            // set a new clock ( timeout )
            clockResetIndex = setTimeout(() => {
                // your code goes here :
                console.log( new Date() , tarGetInput.val())
            }, 1000);
        });
});
1
  • if you want to extend jquery and want to use this method in multiple input elements, then the approved answer is the answer you are looking for .
    – insCode
    Aug 28, 2018 at 15:52
0

This is what I am using with a formControl. It works for me.

this.form.controls[`text`].valueChanges
  .pipe(debounceTime(500), distinctUntilChanged())
  .subscribe((finalText) => {
    yourMethod(finalText);
});
-1

In my thinking a user stops writing when he doesn't keep focus on that input. For this you have a function called "blur" which does stuff like

1
  • 4
    wrong! blur is an event when the focus is lost on a particular input field. what I need to is determine when keyboard is not in usage under that field on which I'm trying to trigger an event.
    – user1386320
    Dec 27, 2012 at 8:16
-1

Use the attribute onkeyup="myFunction()" in the <input> of your html.

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