11

I recently started using Google's new method of Recaptcha - their new Invisible Recaptcha. I realized that the implementation of this version was a little different, as you attach the recaptcha attributes directly to your submit button which then calls google's recaptcha api and begins the verification process. I have all of that working fine, but the one major issue that I am having is with the "Protected by recaptcha" badge positioning.

Upon adding the recaptcha configuration to my submit button, I start seeing the badge on the right of my screen. According to other sites, this badge is supposed to just be a square recaptcha logo until it is hovered and then it is supposed to slide out to be the large rectangle that I am seeing initially on my site.

Here is an image of what I am seeing on my site after implementing the invisible recaptcha.

recaptcha issue

Here is the submit button code containing the recaptcha attributes:

<button class="btn btn-primary btn-block g-recaptcha" data-sitekey="key"
data-callback="submitsecure" data-badge="bottomright" type="submit">Get Started</button>

Note: The other data-badge options such as inline and bottomleft cause the same positioning issues.

The code of of the form containing the button:

    <form action="processjoin.php" method="post" id="signupform" style="padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:10px;max-width:50%;">
        <h2 class="sr-only">Login Form</h2>
        <div></div>
        <div class="illustration"><i class="icon ion-ios-pulse-strong"></i>
            <div class="row">
                <div class="col-md-6">
                    <div class="form-group">
                        <input type="text" name="name" placeholder="Your Name" class="form-control" id="name" />
                    </div>
                    <div class="form-group">
                        <input type="text" name="username" placeholder="Username" class="form-control" id="username" />
                    </div>
                </div>
                <div class="col-md-6">
                    <div class="form-group">
                        <input type="email" name="email" placeholder="Email" class="form-control" id="email" />
                    </div>
                    <div class="form-group">
                        <input type="password" name="password" placeholder="Password" class="form-control" id="password" />
                    </div>
                </div>
            </div>
            <div class="form-group">
                <button class="btn btn-primary btn-block g-recaptcha" data-sitekey="6LfdMhkUAAAAAHl-LXZm_gPP1g-UX0aWt8sMR4uW" data-callback="submitsecure" data-badge="bottomright" type="submit">Get Started</button>
            </div>
            <a href="#" class="forgot">
                <div></div>Already have an account? Sign in.</a>
        </div>
    </form>

I am experiencing two issues with this recaptcha badge:

  1. The badge is glitched outside of its bounding box/border type thing
  2. It also isn't positioned partially off-screen until hovered, like it is supposed to be. I am seeing the full rectangle before I interact with it in any way with my mouse. I should be seeing the square logo until I hover over it, and it slides out to be the full rectangle.

Basically, I need to figure out how to position this properly so that it slides in from off-screen like it is supposed to, and is contained properly inside of its border.

Google Chrome Developer tools tell me that these are the current attributes of the badge div, generated when the window is loaded:

enter image description here

I really appreciate any help that you can provide! If I'm incorrect in thinking that the badge is required, please correct me and I'll force its removal with CSS, however, I'm afraid that this may mess up the captcha verification process and violate Google's policy.

3 Answers 3

8

This might help: https://developers.google.com/recaptcha/docs/invisible#config

You can set data-badge="inline" to allow you to control the CSS.

6

After lots of trial and error, I figured out that the recaptcha badge was positioning to its containing element rather than to the body, and it was also inheriting its line-height from its containing element.

Since I was not directly able to remove the badge from its containing element and move it to the body, I solved the issue with JQuery and a slight CSS change.

JQuery: Appened the badge to the body rather than its containing element (the form)

In order to do this, I had to ensure that the badge had already been fully loaded into the site. Google makes this difficult, but I was able to do it by using jQuery.initialize by timpler.

Once I had the initialize.min.js running on my page, I simply used this code:

jQuery(document).ready(function() {
    $('.grecaptcha-badge').appendTo("body"); //fix recaptcha positioning to body  
});
$.initialize(".grecaptcha-badge", function() {
    $(this).appendTo("body"); //fix recaptcha positioning to body, even if it loads after the page  
});

CSS: Added a change to the line-height to position the badge properly with its container

.grecaptcha-badge {
  line-height:50px !important;
}

This was a tough one to figure out, but in the end it simply came down to the badge inheriting a few too many attributes from its parent. I hope this helps someone in the future!

1
  • 6
    once you remove the badge from the form, the g-recaptcha-response won't get appended to the post request unless you manually create a hidden input field with the name "g-recaptcha-response" within the form. May 21, 2017 at 15:39
1

You can add captcha in a div element at any place on the page

<div class="g-recaptcha"
      data-sitekey="your_site_key"
      data-callback="onSubmit"
      data-size="invisible">
</div>

When you submit the form the following javascript should be called to start captcha validation

grecaptcha.execute();

The onSubmit function (specified in data-callback tag attribute) will be called on successful captcha validation. There you get the recaptcha token that can be injected as hidden field to your form for backend validation.

function onSubmit(recaptchaToken) {
    // inject token as hidden form field and submit form
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.