I am trying to distinguish the different use of the keydown
, keypress
, keyup
, input
, change
event in JavaScript.
If it is a JavaScript autocomplete search box, is it true that we have to use the input
event handler?
The reason is:
the
change
event handler won't be invoked until the user press Enter or leave that input box (by the Tab key or clicking outside of the input box), so thechange
event cannot possibly fit the purpose of making suggestion when the user types in one more character to the input box.The
keydown
event handler can be used to "add" the keystroke to the search term, but for CTRL-v or CMD-v (on Mac) to paste it, we can't really get thekeyCode
one by one if we paste a word such ashello
into the search box -- because only onekeydown
will be for the CTRL and onekeydown
for the v, instead ofhello
-- but we can use the input box'svalue
attribute to get the value -- however, what if the user uses the mouse to right click and choose "paste" to add text to the box -- in which case should we, or can we use a mouse event handler to look at thevalue
attribute? It is just too messy to deal with such low level of keyboard and mouse.
So the input
event handler seems to just fit the exact purpose because ANY value change, the input
event handler will be invoked. And that's why the input
event handler can be important and useful.
We still need the keydown
event handler, because what if the user presses the Down Arrow key to go down on the list of possible item? (and possibly the ESC to make the autocomplete suggestion box disappear). In these cases, the input
event handler and the change
event handler won't be invoked, and the keydown
event will be useful for these cases.
Is the above concept correct, mainly for understanding the input
event?
(A jsfiddle for understanding what events handlers are called: http://jsfiddle.net/jYsjs/ )