I would like to find out what character key is pressed in a cross-browser compatible way in pure Javascript.
"Clear" JavaScript:
function myKeyPress(e){
var keynum;
if(window.event) { // IE
keynum = e.keyCode;
} else if(e.which){ // Netscape/Firefox/Opera
keynum = e.which;
}
alert(String.fromCharCode(keynum));
}
<input type="text" onkeypress="return myKeyPress(event)" />
JQuery:
$("input").keypress(function(event){
alert(String.fromCharCode(event.which));
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input/>
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6this works ok for alphabetic chars, but what about dots/brakets and other typogtaphic symbols? – VoVaVc Jan 24 '14 at 15:13
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7@VoVaVc: It works for those too. The crucial thing is using the
keypress
event, which gives you a character code, rather thankeyup
orkeydown
which give you a key code. – Tim Down Feb 9 '15 at 14:12 -
2
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1
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6@AndyMercer key is now supported by all major browsers: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/KeyboardEvent/… – Ray Dec 23 '18 at 14:22
There are a million duplicates of this question on here, but here goes again anyway:
document.onkeypress = function(evt) {
evt = evt || window.event;
var charCode = evt.keyCode || evt.which;
var charStr = String.fromCharCode(charCode);
alert(charStr);
};
The best reference on key events I've seen is http://unixpapa.com/js/key.html.
More recent and much cleaner: use event.key
. No more arbitrary number codes!
NOTE: The old properties (
.keyCode
and.which
) are Deprecated.
node.addEventListener('keydown', function(event) {
const key = event.key; // "a", "1", "Shift", etc.
});
If you want to make sure only single characters are entered, check key.length === 1
, or that it is one of the characters you expect.
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No, node just means any DOM element. If you had Node.js connecting to a UI, I suppose it would work – Gibolt May 22 '20 at 5:15
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Try:
<table>
<tr><td>Key:</td><td id="key"></td></tr>
<tr><td>Key Code:</td><td id="keyCode"></td></tr>
<tr><td>Event Code:</td><td id="eventCode"></td></tr>
</table>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.addEventListener("keydown", function (e) {
//tested in IE/Chrome/Firefox
document.getElementById("key").innerHTML = e.key;
document.getElementById("keyCode").innerHTML = e.keyCode;
document.getElementById("eventCode").innerHTML = e.code;
})
</script>
*Note: this works in "Run code snippet"
This website does the same as my code above: Keycode.info
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1
Use this one:
function onKeyPress(evt){
evt = (evt) ? evt : (window.event) ? event : null;
if (evt)
{
var charCode = (evt.charCode) ? evt.charCode :((evt.keyCode) ? evt.keyCode :((evt.which) ? evt.which : 0));
if (charCode == 13)
alert('User pressed Enter');
}
}
**check this out**
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script>
$(document).ready(function(){
$(document).keypress(function(e)
{
var keynum;
if(window.event)
{ // IE
keynum = e.keyCode;
}
else if(e.which)
{
// Netscape/Firefox/Opera
keynum = e.which;
}
alert(String.fromCharCode(keynum));
var unicode=e.keyCode? e.keyCode : e.charCode;
alert(unicode);
});
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
<input type="text"></input>
</body>
</html>
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1
One of my favorite libraries to do this in a sophisticated way is Mousetrap.
It comes stocked with a variety of plugins, one of which is the record
plugin which can identify a sequence of keys pressed.
Example:
<script>
function recordSequence() {
Mousetrap.record(function(sequence) {
// sequence is an array like ['ctrl+k', 'c']
alert('You pressed: ' + sequence.join(' '));
});
}
</script>
<button onclick="recordSequence()">Record</button>
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Uncaught TypeError: Mousetrap.record is not a function at recordSequence (****.html:12) at HTMLButtonElement.onclick (****.html:20) – Irrmich Jun 17 '20 at 9:18
event.key
will directly give you the pressed char – Gibolt Sep 5 '17 at 18:04