I have a TextEditingController
where if a user clicks a button it fills in with information. I can't seem to figure out how to change the text inside of a Textfield
or TextFormField
. Is there a solution?
13 Answers
Simply change the text
property
TextField(
controller: txt,
),
RaisedButton(onPressed: () {
txt.text = "My Stringt";
}),
while txt
is just a TextEditingController
var txt = TextEditingController();
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35using this code the cursor goes to left of the Field. is there anyway o fix it? Commented Dec 20, 2018 at 13:47
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4@rickdroio Check out this answer, it will put the cursor at the end. Commented Jul 27, 2019 at 15:05
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@rickdroio yes, the comment down below stackoverflow.com/a/58307018/7691350– Jose JetCommented Oct 25, 2019 at 9:45
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1so I'll have to add a TextEditingController for each input I want to data bind? Commented Aug 20, 2020 at 17:17
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The problem with just setting
_controller.text = "New value";
is that the cursor will be repositioned to the beginning (in material's TextField). Using
_controller.text = "Hello";
_controller.selection = TextSelection.fromPosition(
TextPosition(offset: _controller.text.length),
);
setState(() {});
is not efficient since it rebuilds the widget more than it's necessary (when setting the text property and when calling setState).
--
I believe the best way is to combine everything into one simple command:
final _newValue = "New value";
_controller.value = TextEditingValue(
text: _newValue,
selection: TextSelection.fromPosition(
TextPosition(offset: _newValue.length),
),
);
It works properly for both Material and Cupertino Textfields.
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5This should be the right answer, since it deals with the problem of changing the controller's value and the cursor coming back to the start of the text all the time– Jose JetCommented Oct 25, 2019 at 9:45
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11One more suggestion, when providing offset, we can do: int currentOffset = _textEditingController.selection.base.offset; And then provide currentOffset as offset. This will also handle the case when the user is in between the string.– AbhinavCommented Apr 20, 2020 at 11:23
Screenshot:
Create a
TextEditingController
:final TextEditingController _controller = TextEditingController();
Assign it to your
TextField
orTextFormField
:TextField(controller: _controller)
To update the text using a button at the cursor position (imagine there is already text in the textfield) :
ElevatedButton( onPressed: () { const newText = 'Hello World'; final updatedText = _controller.text + newText; _controller.value = _controller.value.copyWith( text: updatedText, selection: TextSelection.collapsed(offset: updatedText.length), ); }, )
You can use the text editing controller to manipulate the value inside a textfield.
var textController = new TextEditingController();
Now, create a new textfield and set textController
as the controller for the textfield as shown below.
new TextField(controller: textController)
Now, create a RaisedButton
anywhere in your code and set the desired text in the onPressed
method of the RaisedButton
.
new RaisedButton(
onPressed: () {
textController.text = "New text";
}
),
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11There is no need to call setState on changing text of TextField Commented Aug 27, 2019 at 14:26
_mytexteditingcontroller.value = new TextEditingController.fromValue(new TextEditingValue(text: "My String")).value;
This seems to work if anyone has a better way please feel free to let me know.
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3what about just : _mytexteditingcontroller.text= "your text" Commented Jul 1, 2018 at 21:56
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Perfect if you want to create a TextField with a value already filled in :) Commented Jan 10, 2019 at 22:23
First Thing
TextEditingController MyController= new TextEditingController();
Then add it to init State or in any SetState
MyController.value = TextEditingValue(text: "ANY TEXT");
The issue does not appear if you use the StatefulWidget
with _controller
as a member. Sounds weird but moving from stateless to stateful worked fine (that's because the widget is redrawn on each input to text editing controller which does not preserve state) E.g.:
Stateful: (working)
class MyWidget extends StatefulWidget {
const MyWidget(
{Key? key})
: super(key: key);
@override
_MyWidgetState createState() =>
_MyWidgetState();
}
class _MyWidgetState
extends State<MyWidget> {
late TextEditingController _controller;
@override
void initState() {
super.initState();
_controller = TextEditingController(text: "My Text");
}
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.start,
children: [
TextField(
controller: _controller,
),
],
);
}
}
Stateless: (issue)
class MyWidget extends StatelessWidget {
const MyWidget(
{Key? key})
: super(key: key);
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.start,
children: [
TextField(
controller: TextEditingController(text: "My Text"),
),
],
);
}
}
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1I love the solution for the stateless controller. So simple. Thanks! Commented Mar 11, 2022 at 16:52
If you simply want to replace the entire text inside the text editing controller, then the other answers here work. However, if you want to programmatically insert, replace a selection, or delete, then you need to have a little more code.
Making your own custom keyboard is one use case for this. All of the inserts and deletions below are done programmatically:
Inserting text
The _controller
here is a TextEditingController
for the TextField
.
void _insertText(String myText) {
final text = _controller.text;
final textSelection = _controller.selection;
final newText = text.replaceRange(
textSelection.start,
textSelection.end,
myText,
);
final myTextLength = myText.length;
_controller.text = newText;
_controller.selection = textSelection.copyWith(
baseOffset: textSelection.start + myTextLength,
extentOffset: textSelection.start + myTextLength,
);
}
Thanks to this Stack Overflow answer for help with this.
Deleting text
There are a few different situations to think about:
- There is a selection (delete the selection)
- The cursor is at the beginning (don’t do anything)
- Anything else (delete the previous character)
Here is the implementation:
void _backspace() {
final text = _controller.text;
final textSelection = _controller.selection;
final selectionLength = textSelection.end - textSelection.start;
// There is a selection.
if (selectionLength > 0) {
final newText = text.replaceRange(
textSelection.start,
textSelection.end,
'',
);
_controller.text = newText;
_controller.selection = textSelection.copyWith(
baseOffset: textSelection.start,
extentOffset: textSelection.start,
);
return;
}
// The cursor is at the beginning.
if (textSelection.start == 0) {
return;
}
// Delete the previous character
final newStart = textSelection.start - 1;
final newEnd = textSelection.start;
final newText = text.replaceRange(
newStart,
newEnd,
'',
);
_controller.text = newText;
_controller.selection = textSelection.copyWith(
baseOffset: newStart,
extentOffset: newStart,
);
}
Full code
You can find the full code and more explanation in my article Custom In-App Keyboard in Flutter.
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I am using this code which is doing basically adding value at the start when value of textField is not null but problem is when it added $ sign after an input position of cursor changes and starts writing before value like if previous value was $1 then it writes 2$1. So is there any solution or better logic for this task? "
onChanged: (value) { if (dollarSignAdded == false) { priceTextEditingController.value=TextEditingValue( text: "\$" +priceTextEditingController.text); dollarSignAdded = true; } else if (value.isEmpty) { dollarSignAdded = false; } }
" Commented May 18, 2021 at 8:56
Here is a full example where the parent widget controls the children widget. The parent widget updates the children widgets (Text and TextField) with a counter.
To update the Text widget, all you do is pass in the String parameter. To update the TextField widget, you need to pass in a controller, and set the text in the controller.
main.dart:
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
void main() => runApp(MyApp());
class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return MaterialApp(
title: 'Demo',
home: Home(),
);
}
}
class Home extends StatelessWidget {
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Scaffold(
appBar: AppBar(
title: Text('Update Text and TextField demo'),
),
body: ParentWidget());
}
}
class ParentWidget extends StatefulWidget {
@override
_ParentWidgetState createState() => _ParentWidgetState();
}
class _ParentWidgetState extends State<ParentWidget> {
int _counter = 0;
String _text = 'no taps yet';
var _controller = TextEditingController(text: 'initial value');
void _handleTap() {
setState(() {
_counter = _counter + 1;
_text = 'number of taps: ' + _counter.toString();
_controller.text = 'number of taps: ' + _counter.toString();
});
}
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
return Container(
child: Column(children: <Widget>[
RaisedButton(
onPressed: _handleTap,
child: const Text('Tap me', style: TextStyle(fontSize: 20)),
),
Text('$_text'),
TextField(controller: _controller,),
]),
);
}
}
Declare TextEditingController.
supply controller to the TextField.
user controller's text property to change the value of the textField.
follow this official solution to the problem
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2
simply change the text or value
property of controller.
if you do not edit selection property cursor goes to first of the new text.
onPress: () {
_controller.value=TextEditingValue(text: "sample text",selection: TextSelection.fromPosition(TextPosition(offset: sellPriceController.text.length)));
}
or in case you change the .text property:
onPress: () {
_controller.text="sample text";
_controller.selection = TextSelection.fromPosition(TextPosition(offset:_controller.text.length));
}
in cases that do not matter to you just don't change the selection property
simply add labelText to InputDecoration
TextField(
controller: _controller,
decoration: InputDecoration(labelText: 'init text'),
),