197

Here is my form and the onClick method. I would like to execute this method when the Enter button of keyboard is pressed. How ?

N.B: No jquery is appreciated.

comment: function (e) {
  e.preventDefault();
  this.props.comment({
    comment: this.refs.text.getDOMNode().value,
    userPostId:this.refs.userPostId.getDOMNode().value,
  })
},


<form className="commentForm">
  <textarea rows="2" cols="110" placeholder="****Comment Here****" ref="text"  /><br />
  <input type="text" placeholder="userPostId" ref="userPostId" /> <br />
  <button type="button" className="btn btn-success" onClick={this.comment}>Comment</button>
</form>

18 Answers 18

323

Change <button type="button" to <button type="submit". Remove the onClick. Instead do <form className="commentForm" onSubmit={onFormSubmit}>. This should catch clicking the button and pressing the return key.

const onFormSubmit = e => {
  e.preventDefault();
  // send state to server with e.g. `window.fetch`
}

...

<form onSubmit={onFormSubmit}>
  ...
  <button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>

Full example without any silly form libraries:

function LoginForm() {
  const [email, setEmail] = useState('')
  const [password, setPassword] = useState('')
  const [submitting, setSubmitting] = useState(false)
  const [formError, setFormError] = useState('')

  const onFormSubmit = async (e: React.FormEvent<HTMLFormElement>) => {
    try {
      e.preventDefault();
      setFormError('')
      setSubmitting(true)
      await fetch(/*POST email + password*/)
    } catch (err: any) {
      console.error(err)
      setFormError(err.toString())
    } finally {
      setSubmitting(false)
    }
  }

  return (
    <form onSubmit={onFormSubmit}>
      <input type="email" autoComplete="email" value={email} onChange={e => setEmail(e.currentTarget.value)} required />
      <input type="password" autoComplete="current-password" value={password} onChange={e => setPassword(e.currentTarget.value)} required />
      {Boolean(formError) &&
        <div className="form-error">{formError}</div>
      }
      <button type="submit" disabled={submitting}>Login</button>
    </form>
  )
}

P.S. Remember that any buttons in your form which should not submit the form should explicitly have type="button".

16
  • 2
    why onSubmit={this.onCommentSubmit}> ?@Dominic Oct 20, 2015 at 1:50
  • 1
    @JasonBourne you can give the callback any name you want, I just always give event callbacks names like onSomethingClick, onMouseMove, onFormKeyPress etc, rather than name the method based on what it is supposed to do inside it, as sometimes that changes or is in another method (more testable)
    – Dominic
    Oct 20, 2015 at 8:39
  • 3
    @JasonBourne this is the correct and best practice method and it works in both instances, see jsfiddle.net/ferahl/b125o4z0
    – Dominic
    Oct 20, 2015 at 10:07
  • 35
    In onCommentSubmit, you should also call event.preventDefault() and event.stopPropagation() to prevent the form from reloading the page (since its a form with a blank action attribute most likely) Feb 11, 2016 at 20:08
  • 2
    this does nothing for me. form still does not submit on 'enter'
    – Nick Res
    Jan 6, 2019 at 1:23
78

It's been quite a few years since this question was last answered. React introduced "Hooks" back in 2017, and "keyCode" has been deprecated.

Now we can write this:

  useEffect(() => {
    const listener = event => {
      if (event.code === "Enter" || event.code === "NumpadEnter") {
        console.log("Enter key was pressed. Run your function.");
        event.preventDefault();
        // callMyFunction();
      }
    };
    document.addEventListener("keydown", listener);
    return () => {
      document.removeEventListener("keydown", listener);
    };
  }, []);

This registers a listener on the keydown event, when the component is loaded for the first time. It removes the event listener when the component is destroyed.

5
  • 1
    I'm trying to have it submit a formData useState() hook - but it's submitting the "default" values - I'm assuming it's essentially a closure that can only use the values from when the listener is defined (?) -- should I just trigger a click on the submit button? or is there a way to directly call the executeSearch() function, but have it use the updated formData state? Jan 22, 2021 at 19:47
  • This method can't be used in React classes. Also to be clear the keyCode that has been deprecated is the DOM keyCode: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/KeyboardEvent/keyCode not part of React
    – Paul Odeon
    Apr 9, 2021 at 8:21
  • 1
    Similarly for those trying to prevent the Enter key from triggering a form submit, use event.preventDefault() as the replacement for callMyFunction()
    – vulpxn
    Apr 12, 2021 at 15:32
  • @vulpxn That's a really good point! Most people probably don't want to do the default action, so I've edited my answer to include this line now.
    – WSBT
    Apr 13, 2021 at 5:56
  • 1
    this is great but i like this stackoverflow.com/a/66213831/7282340
    – Jack Riley
    Aug 11, 2022 at 5:30
26

Use keydown event to do it:

   input: HTMLDivElement | null = null;

   onKeyDown = (event: React.KeyboardEvent<HTMLDivElement>): void => {
      // 'keypress' event misbehaves on mobile so we track 'Enter' key via 'keydown' event
      if (event.key === 'Enter') {
        event.preventDefault();
        event.stopPropagation();
        this.onSubmit();
      }
    }

    onSubmit = (): void => {
      if (input.textContent) {
         this.props.onSubmit(input.textContent);
         input.focus();
         input.textContent = '';
      }
    }

    render() {
      return (
         <form className="commentForm">
           <input
             className="comment-input"
             aria-multiline="true"
             role="textbox"
             contentEditable={true}
             onKeyDown={this.onKeyDown}
             ref={node => this.input = node} 
           />
           <button type="button" className="btn btn-success" onClick={this.onSubmit}>Comment</button>
         </form>
      );
    }
1
  • 1
    This causes premature form submission with some non-roman languages. For example, you need to use 'Enter' to make selection from numerous character options when typing in Japanese. You don't want to submit text when the user is making character selection Mar 15 at 22:18
26

this is how you do it if you want to listen for the "Enter" key. There is an onKeydown prop that you can use and you can read about it in react doc

and here is a codeSandbox

const App = () => {
    const something=(event)=> {
        if (event.keyCode === 13) {
            console.log('enter')
        }
    }
return (
    <div className="App">
        <h1>Hello CodeSandbox</h1>
        <h2>Start editing to see some magic happen!</h2>
        <input  type='text' onKeyDown={(e) => something(e) }/>
    </div>
);
}
1
  • 4
    This works well, but in 2020 "event.keyCode" is depreciated, use "event.key". Also, if you are listening for the "Enter" key, it is: "event.key === "Enter"
    – Timbokun
    Jun 14, 2021 at 0:02
4
import React, { useEffect, useRef } from 'react';

function Example() {

    let inp = useRef();
    useEffect(() => {
        if (!inp && !inp.current) return;
        inp.current.focus();
        return () => inp = null;
    });

    const handleSubmit = () => {
        //...
    }

    return (
        <form
            onSubmit={e => {
                e.preventDefault();
                handleSubmit(e);
            }}
        >
            <input
                name="fakename"
                defaultValue="...."
                ref={inp}
                type="radio"
                style={{
                    position: "absolute",
                    opacity: 0
                }}
            />
            <button type="submit">
                submit
            </button>
        </form>
    )
}

Enter code here sometimes in popups it would not work to binding just a form and passing the onSubmit to the form because form may not have any input.

In this case if you bind the event to the document by doing document.addEventListener it will cause problem in another parts of the application.

For solving this issue we should wrap a form and should put a input with what is hidden by css, then you focus on that input by ref it will be work correctly.

3

If you don't have the form inside <form>, you could use this in componentDidMount():

componentDidMount = () => {
      document.addEventListener("keydown", (e) => 
        e.code === "Enter" && console.log("my function"))
    }
    
componentDidMount() //<-- remove this, it's just for testing here

2
useEffect(() => {
const keyEnter = event => {
      if (event.key === 'Enter') {
        event.preventDefault()
      }
    }

    document.addEventListener('keydown', keyEnter)

    return () => {
      document.removeEventListener('keydown', keyEnter)
    }
    }, [])
1

I've built up on @user1032613's answer and on this answer and created a "on press enter click element with querystring" hook. enjoy!

const { useEffect } = require("react");

const useEnterKeyListener = ({ querySelectorToExecuteClick }) => {
    useEffect(() => {
        //https://stackoverflow.com/a/59147255/828184
        const listener = (event) => {
            if (event.code === "Enter" || event.code === "NumpadEnter") {
                handlePressEnter();
            }
        };

        document.addEventListener("keydown", listener);

        return () => {
            document.removeEventListener("keydown", listener);
        };
    }, []);

    const handlePressEnter = () => {
        //https://stackoverflow.com/a/54316368/828184
        const mouseClickEvents = ["mousedown", "click", "mouseup"];
        function simulateMouseClick(element) {
            mouseClickEvents.forEach((mouseEventType) =>
                element.dispatchEvent(
                    new MouseEvent(mouseEventType, {
                        view: window,
                        bubbles: true,
                        cancelable: true,
                        buttons: 1,
                    })
                )
            );
        }

        var element = document.querySelector(querySelectorToExecuteClick);
        simulateMouseClick(element);
    };
};

export default useEnterKeyListener;

This is how you use it:

useEnterKeyListener({
    querySelectorToExecuteClick: "#submitButton",
});

https://codesandbox.io/s/useenterkeylistener-fxyvl?file=/src/App.js:399-407

1

I have found this to be easier. Listen for the keyDown event on the input you want to submit by pressing 'Enter" key and handle the submit action with conditional ternary operator as show below in a single line.
This is mostly used on subscribing a newsletter where there's no need of a button to submit. Hope it helps.

<input 
     type="email" 
     placeholder="Email" 
     onKeyDown={e => e.key === 'Enter' ? handleSubmit : ''} />

1

You can use <button type='submit'></button> with nothing in the middle.

1

You can change only button type => button to submit

    <form
        onSubmit={e => {
            e.preventDefault();
            handleSubmit(e);
        }}
       >
        <input
            name="developers"
            defaultValue="submit"
            ref={dev}
            type="radio"
        />
        <button type="submit">
            submit
        </button>
    </form>
0

here is very optimised code

useEffect(() => {
    document
        .getElementById("Your-element-id")
        .addEventListener("keydown", function (event) {
            if (event.code === "Enter" || event.code === "NumpadEnter") {
                event.preventDefault();
                document.getElementById("submit-element").click();
            }
        });
}, []);
2
  • Is this works in Mac?
    – Hyzyr
    Jan 17, 2022 at 18:42
  • 1
    @HydyrAvezberdiyew Yes, I have tested this code on mac itself Jan 18, 2022 at 20:15
0

use mousetrap
https://www.npmjs.com/package/mousetrap
https://www.npmjs.com/package/@types/mousetrap
(yeah, I know, unfortunatelly when You use typescript u have to install types aside from basic module)

import {bind} from 'mousetrap';

const handleSubmit = async () => {
// submit func here
};

bind(['enter', 'return'], handleSubmit);

other example of using mousetrap, maybe for other purpose:

bind(['command+k', 'ctrl+k'], function(e) {
    highlight([11, 12, 13, 14]);
    return false;
});
0

So, I was looking for some solution around the same scenario where on the login page, after a user hits(press) enter button from keyboard should trigger login process.

You can configure the textbox with one of code,

<input
  // rest your code
  onKeyPress={ onkeyup }
/>

Please keep in mind I am using react hooks to achieve it, apart from that this link will help you understand more enter key event handler

0

You may approach this problem like this.

   onKeyPress={e => e.key === 'Enter' && handleFormSubmit}
0

Try this:

const enterKye=()=>{
if(e.key==="Enter"){
  alert("hello");
  }
}
<input type="text" onKeyPress={enterKye}>

-1

for example next React+TS code(add use hooks for state and etc):


type Props = {
...any properties
} & [any other type if need]

//I want notice that input data type of component maybe difference from type of props
const ExampleComponent: React.FC<Props> = (props: [Props or any other type]){
     const anySerice = new AnyService();

     const handleSubmit = async (eventForm) => {
        await anySerice.signUp();
     }

     const onKeyUp = (event: KeyboardEvent) => {
        //you can stay first condition only
        if (event.key === 'Enter' || event.charCode === 13) { 
            handleSubmit(event)
        }
    } 
    
    ...other code
    
    return (<Form noValidate validated={validated} className="modal-form-uthorize" onKeyPress={onKeyUp}>

    ...other components form

    </Form>)
}

export default ExampleComponent;
-3

I solved this problem by sent autoFocus property in button

   <button autoFocus={true}></button>

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