How do I block special characters from being typed into an input field with jquery?
27 Answers
A simple example using a regular expression which you could change to allow/disallow whatever you like.
$('input').on('keypress', function (event) {
var regex = new RegExp("^[a-zA-Z0-9]+$");
var key = String.fromCharCode(!event.charCode ? event.which : event.charCode);
if (!regex.test(key)) {
event.preventDefault();
return false;
}
});
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62This doesn't work for pasted text & may also prevent the user from non-text keypresses like backspace, arrow keys, etc. Commented Jul 2, 2012 at 17:41
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12
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1Does not work for spanish words like: avión (plane), árbol (tree), etc.– nikoskipCommented Jan 20, 2015 at 18:31
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1It doesn't works in latest firefox brower, but working fine in chrome– PhoenixCommented Dec 31, 2018 at 11:57
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3This solution works for me on a Bootstrap-TagsInput element. To address the paste issue, you can simply add "paste" to the event parameter list like so: $('input').on('keypress, paste'', ()=>........– Jim22150Commented Jul 10, 2020 at 13:50
I was looking for an answer that restricted input to only alphanumeric characters, but still allowed for the use of control characters (e.g., backspace, delete, tab) and copy+paste. None of the provided answers that I tried satisfied all of these requirements, so I came up with the following using the input
event.
$('input').on('input', function() {
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^a-z0-9]/gi, ''));
});
Edit:
As rinogo pointed out in the comments, the above code snippet forces the cursor to the end of the input when typing in the middle of the input text. I believe the code snippet below solves this problem.
$('input').on('input', function() {
var c = this.selectionStart,
r = /[^a-z0-9]/gi,
v = $(this).val();
if(r.test(v)) {
$(this).val(v.replace(r, ''));
c--;
}
this.setSelectionRange(c, c);
});
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3+1 I was scrolling down the answers looking for an answer like this one or I would submit my own answer. This answer filters out any disallowed characters instantly! Great! Commented Mar 23, 2013 at 13:39
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4+1 Works for pasted text, doesn't interfere with FF's backspace and delete keys, and doesn't rely on
event.which
orevent.keycode
! Wish I could +10!– rinogoCommented Aug 8, 2013 at 18:39 -
4...BUT in Chrome and IE, when you type new characters or use the backspace and delete keys in the middle of the input text, the cursor is moved to the end of the text... :/ Is there an easy workaround for this? I wanted so badly for this to work!– rinogoCommented Aug 8, 2013 at 18:57
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So close... this code has very weird behavior in Chrome Mobile. Cursor jumps around on first letter typed and on backspace too.– JulianoCommented Mar 19, 2015 at 20:18
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3@Juliano Interesting, it seems that selectionStart always returns 0 on Chrome Mobile regardless of where the cursor/caret is currently positioned. I'm not sure (yet) if this is a bug or intended behavior. I'm currently researching the issue and will update my answer or comment here when I learn more.– rexmacCommented Mar 19, 2015 at 23:23
Short answer: prevent the 'keypress' event:
$("input").keypress(function(e){
var charCode = !e.charCode ? e.which : e.charCode;
if(/* Test for special character */ )
e.preventDefault();
})
Long answer: Use a plugin like jquery.alphanum
There are several things to consider when picking a solution:
- Pasted text
- Control characters like backspace or F5 may be prevented by the above code.
- é, í, ä etc
- Arabic or Chinese...
- Cross Browser compatibility
I think this area is complex enough to warrant using a 3rd party plugin. I tried out several of the available plugins but found some problems with each of them so I went ahead and wrote jquery.alphanum. The code looks like this:
$("input").alphanum();
Or for more fine-grained control, add some settings:
$("#username").alphanum({
allow : "€$£",
disallow : "xyz",
allowUpper : false
});
Hope it helps.
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1Awesome stuff man, awesome. I just had to add an option for enabling/disabling the slash char ('/') as it did not work while putting it in the
allow
setting. But that's the beauty of jquery plugins, the fact that you can modify them to suit your needs. Thanks! Commented May 10, 2013 at 11:37 -
Thanks Adrian. Btw, I just tried enabling the slash using the
allow
option and it worked ok for me using this code:$('#firstName').alphanum({allow: "/"});
Any chance you could provide more info? If there is a bug or a problem with the docs it would be nice to get it fixed. Cheers Commented May 10, 2013 at 14:51 -
Hi KevSheedy, thanks for taking the time to test this out. Sorry I did not make it clear enough. The problem was that I also had
allowOtherCharSets: false
andallowCaseless: false
. These interfered with the settings set inallow
. From my point of view, I think that theallow
option should veto out all the other options (likeallowOtherCharSets
orallowCaseless
). So if you specify a character in theallow
option, it should be allowed regardless of the other options set in the configuration object. Same goes fordisallow
. But this is just my opinion. :) Cheers again! :) Commented May 13, 2013 at 6:19 -
9
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2Everyone seems pretty thrilled with this but a user can easy paste text with any characters and this won't prevent that. Commented Mar 24, 2017 at 14:16
Use simple onkeypress event inline.
<input type="text" name="count" onkeypress="return /[0-9a-zA-Z]/i.test(event.key)">
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4Note that
onkeypress
is now deprecated in favor ofonkeydown
– ThayneCommented Apr 25, 2022 at 15:47 -
6
Use HTML5's pattern input attribute!
<input type="text" pattern="^[a-zA-Z0-9]+$" />
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29While this solution prevents undesired characters from being submitted, it does not prevent undesired characters from being entered into the input field.– rexmacCommented Mar 19, 2015 at 23:36
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4There is also the risk that the user is not using an HTML5 browser. Commented Aug 11, 2016 at 8:58
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3From UX experience, one thing many people hate more than being restricted in what they can type is being told you did it wrong afterwards. - Forcing of input is to reduce error messages and invalid notifications.– JulixCommented Oct 14, 2016 at 2:15
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2@Julix Its a case by case thing. There are some fields that can only be numeric (price or any currency amount, etc) where it doesn't make sense to listen to alphabetic character input. But yeah mine was not really a solution to OP's problem but a nice and easy way to help with the UX problem. Commented Apr 23, 2017 at 23:54
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Warning to copy-pasters: this disables non-English chars too. Commented Jan 13 at 0:16
Use regex to allow/disallow anything. Also, for a slightly more robust version than the accepted answer, allowing characters that don't have a key value associated with them (backspace, tab, arrow keys, delete, etc.) can be done by first passing through the keypress event and check the key based on keycode instead of value.
$('#input').bind('keydown', function (event) {
switch (event.keyCode) {
case 8: // Backspace
case 9: // Tab
case 13: // Enter
case 37: // Left
case 38: // Up
case 39: // Right
case 40: // Down
break;
default:
var regex = new RegExp("^[a-zA-Z0-9.,/ $@()]+$");
var key = event.key;
if (!regex.test(key)) {
event.preventDefault();
return false;
}
break;
}
});
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This should be the most upvoted answer. Most of the answer don't take into account those special characters that doesn't have an associated value. Commented Sep 19, 2020 at 20:06
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this works great but you can still copy and paste invalid characters in the input field– pixelCommented May 13, 2021 at 16:31
Your textbox:
<input type="text" id="name">
Your javascript:
$("#name").keypress(function(event) {
var character = String.fromCharCode(event.keyCode);
return isValid(character);
});
function isValid(str) {
return !/[~`!@#$%\^&*()+=\-\[\]\\';,/{}|\\":<>\?]/g.test(str);
}
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@Bhargav Rao, I deleted the other duplicate post and reposted this one because this one was more appropriate, thanks for pointing that out– chandlerCommented Jul 10, 2017 at 15:47
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2This will not work when copying and pasting text with invalid characters though– pixelCommented May 14, 2021 at 15:19
Take a look at the jQuery alphanumeric plugin. https://github.com/KevinSheedy/jquery.alphanum
//All of these are from their demo page
//only numbers and alpha characters
$('.sample1').alphanumeric();
//only numeric
$('.sample4').numeric();
//only numeric and the .
$('.sample5').numeric({allow:"."});
//all alphanumeric except the . 1 and a
$('.sample6').alphanumeric({ichars:'.1a'});
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Is there one for letters? Normally I just use nan for numbers only (like a zip code or phone)– user9008566Commented Jan 24, 2019 at 17:23
this is an example that prevent the user from typing the character "a"
$(function() {
$('input:text').keydown(function(e) {
if(e.keyCode==65)
return false;
});
});
key codes refrence here:
http://www.expandinghead.net/keycode.html
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I would think that all of the keycodes that you do not want to allow can be overwhelming to try and manage.– RSolbergCommented May 21, 2009 at 23:14
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If you want to restrict someone to only be able to enter numbers 1 through 5, you end up managing 5 keycodes within your code.– RSolbergCommented May 21, 2009 at 23:19
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2It's actually not a bad plan if AlphaNumeric isn't the plugin for you. I made it work with a switch/case statement. This example disallows characters that aren't allowed in directory names: $('input[type='text'], textarea').keydown(function(ev){ switch(ev.keyCode){case 47: case 92: case 63: case 37: case 42: case 59: case 124: case 34: case 60: case 62: return false;}; });– M MillerCommented Jul 24, 2011 at 19:42
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1@user434917, your code is not working when i test it with android mobile chrome browser. do you have any solution for it..? Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 14:43
I use this code modifying others that I saw. Only grand to the user write if the key pressed or pasted text pass the pattern test (match) (this example is a text input that only allows 8 digits)
$("input").on("keypress paste", function(e){
var c = this.selectionStart, v = $(this).val();
if (e.type == "keypress")
var key = String.fromCharCode(!e.charCode ? e.which : e.charCode)
else
var key = e.originalEvent.clipboardData.getData('Text')
var val = v.substr(0, c) + key + v.substr(c, v.length)
if (!val.match(/\d{0,8}/) || val.match(/\d{0,8}/).toString() != val) {
e.preventDefault()
return false
}
})
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why
!e.charCode ? e.which : e.charCode
and not simplye.charCode ? e.charCode : e.which
? Commented May 4, 2018 at 12:32 -
$(function(){
$('input').keyup(function(){
var input_val = $(this).val();
var inputRGEX = /^[a-zA-Z0-9]*$/;
var inputResult = inputRGEX.test(input_val);
if(!(inputResult))
{
this.value = this.value.replace(/[^a-z0-9\s]/gi, '');
}
});
});
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this does not work when pasting text with invalid characters– pixelCommented May 14, 2021 at 16:07
Write some javascript code on onkeypress event of textbox. as per requirement allow and restrict character in your textbox
function isNumberKeyWithStar(evt) {
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : event.keyCode
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57) && charCode != 42)
return false;
return true;
}
function isNumberKey(evt) {
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : event.keyCode
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
return false;
return true;
}
function isNumberKeyForAmount(evt) {
var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : event.keyCode
if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57) && charCode != 46)
return false;
return true;
}
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1This is working if I type manually. But I am able to paste copied special characters. Commented Jan 6, 2016 at 12:30
To replace special characters, space and convert to lower case
$(document).ready(function (){
$(document).on("keyup", "#Id", function () {
$("#Id").val($("#Id").val().replace(/[^a-z0-9\s]/gi, '').replace(/[_\s]/g, '').toLowerCase());
});
});
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This is the perfect answer that everybody should know about it. It passed the copy pasted as well and every special characters. Great job . Thanks Commented Jun 29, 2021 at 10:52
You don't need jQuery for this action
You can achieve this using plain JavaScript, You can put this in the onKeyUp
event.
Restrict - Special Characters
e.target.value = e.target.value.replace(/[^\w]|_/g, '').toLowerCase()
Accept - Number only
e.target.value = e.target.value.replace(/[^0-9]/g, '').toLowerCase()
Accept - Small Alphabet only
e.target.value = e.target.value.replace(/[^0-9]/g, '').toLowerCase()
I could write for some more scenarios but I have to maintain the specific answer.
Note It will work with jquery, react, angular, and so on.
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Either I am blind or I am missing something, but your second and third option are exactly the same, are they not? Commented Oct 1, 2022 at 20:35
Yes you can do by using jQuery as:
<script>
$(document).ready(function()
{
$("#username").blur(function()
{
//remove all the class add the messagebox classes and start fading
$("#msgbox").removeClass().addClass('messagebox').text('Checking...').fadeIn("slow");
//check the username exists or not from ajax
$.post("user_availability.php",{ user_name:$(this).val() } ,function(data)
{
if(data=='empty') // if username is empty
{
$("#msgbox").fadeTo(200,0.1,function() //start fading the messagebox
{
//add message and change the class of the box and start fading
$(this).html('Empty user id is not allowed').addClass('messageboxerror').fadeTo(900,1);
});
}
else if(data=='invalid') // if special characters used in username
{
$("#msgbox").fadeTo(200,0.1,function() //start fading the messagebox
{
//add message and change the class of the box and start fading
$(this).html('Sorry, only letters (a-z), numbers (0-9), and periods (.) are allowed.').addClass('messageboxerror').fadeTo(900,1);
});
}
else if(data=='no') // if username not avaiable
{
$("#msgbox").fadeTo(200,0.1,function() //start fading the messagebox
{
//add message and change the class of the box and start fading
$(this).html('User id already exists').addClass('messageboxerror').fadeTo(900,1);
});
}
else
{
$("#msgbox").fadeTo(200,0.1,function() //start fading the messagebox
{
//add message and change the class of the box and start fading
$(this).html('User id available to register').addClass('messageboxok').fadeTo(900,1);
});
}
});
});
});
</script>
<input type="text" id="username" name="username"/><span id="msgbox" style="display:none"></span>
and script for your user_availability.php will be:
<?php
include'includes/config.php';
//value got from the get method
$user_name = trim($_POST['user_name']);
if($user_name == ''){
echo "empty";
}elseif(preg_match('/[\'^£$%&*()}{@#~?><>,|=_+¬-]/', $user_name)){
echo "invalid";
}else{
$select = mysql_query("SELECT user_id FROM staff");
$i=0;
//this varible contains the array of existing users
while($fetch = mysql_fetch_array($select)){
$existing_users[$i] = $fetch['user_id'];
$i++;
}
//checking weather user exists or not in $existing_users array
if (in_array($user_name, $existing_users))
{
//user name is not availble
echo "no";
}
else
{
//user name is available
echo "yes";
}
}
?>
I tried to add for / and \ but not succeeded.
You can also do it by using javascript & code will be:
<!-- Check special characters in username start -->
<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
function check(e) {
var keynum
var keychar
var numcheck
// For Internet Explorer
if (window.event) {
keynum = e.keyCode;
}
// For Netscape/Firefox/Opera
else if (e.which) {
keynum = e.which;
}
keychar = String.fromCharCode(keynum);
//List of special characters you want to restrict
if (keychar == "'" || keychar == "`" || keychar =="!" || keychar =="@" || keychar =="#" || keychar =="$" || keychar =="%" || keychar =="^" || keychar =="&" || keychar =="*" || keychar =="(" || keychar ==")" || keychar =="-" || keychar =="_" || keychar =="+" || keychar =="=" || keychar =="/" || keychar =="~" || keychar =="<" || keychar ==">" || keychar =="," || keychar ==";" || keychar ==":" || keychar =="|" || keychar =="?" || keychar =="{" || keychar =="}" || keychar =="[" || keychar =="]" || keychar =="¬" || keychar =="£" || keychar =='"' || keychar =="\\") {
return false;
} else {
return true;
}
}
</script>
<!-- Check special characters in username end -->
<!-- in your form -->
User id : <input type="text" id="txtname" name="txtname" onkeypress="return check(event)"/>
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2Dude, you've included a whole bunch of excess code that's probably not helpful. Can you cut it down to the bare minimum? And he was asking about jQuery, I'm not sure if the PHP is relevant.– Simon E.Commented Sep 21, 2011 at 4:49
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@PHP Ferrari : I am using javascript code, Your Code working fine, How can I display alert popup message if the customer enters the special character. The message like "Special Characters Not Allowed".– GemCommented Aug 17, 2017 at 6:15
Wanted to comment on Alex's comment to Dale's answer. Not possible (first need how much "rep"? That wont happen very soon.. strange system.) So as an answer:
Backspace can be added by adding \b to the regex definition like this: [a-zA-Z0-9\b]. Or you simply allow the whole Latin range, including more or less anything "non exotic" characters (also control chars like backspace): ^[\u0000-\u024F\u20AC]+$
Only real unicode char outside latin there is the euro sign (20ac), add whatever you may need else.
To also handle input entered via copy&paste, simply also bind to the "change" event and check the input there too - deleting it or striping it / giving an error message like "not supported characters"..
if (!regex.test($j(this).val())) {
alert('your input contained not supported characters');
$j(this).val('');
return false;
}
Restrict specials characters on keypress. Here's a test page for key codes: http://www.asquare.net/javascript/tests/KeyCode.html
var specialChars = [62,33,36,64,35,37,94,38,42,40,41];
some_element.bind("keypress", function(event) {
// prevent if in array
if($.inArray(event.which,specialChars) != -1) {
event.preventDefault();
}
});
In Angular, I needed a proper currency format in my textfield. My solution:
var angularApp = angular.module('Application', []);
...
// new angular directive
angularApp.directive('onlyNum', function() {
return function( scope, element, attrs) {
var specialChars = [62,33,36,64,35,37,94,38,42,40,41];
// prevent these special characters
element.bind("keypress", function(event) {
if($.inArray(event.which,specialChars) != -1) {
prevent( scope, event, attrs)
}
});
var allowableKeys = [8,9,37,39,46,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56
,57,96,97,98,99,100,101,102,103,104,105,110,190];
element.bind("keydown", function(event) {
if($.inArray(event.which,allowableKeys) == -1) {
prevent( scope, event, attrs)
}
});
};
})
// scope.$apply makes angular aware of your changes
function prevent( scope, event, attrs) {
scope.$apply(function(){
scope.$eval(attrs.onlyNum);
event.preventDefault();
});
event.preventDefault();
}
In the html add the directive
<input only-num type="text" maxlength="10" id="amount" placeholder="$XXXX.XX"
autocomplete="off" ng-model="vm.amount" ng-change="vm.updateRequest()">
and in the corresponding angular controller I only allow there to be only 1 period, convert text to number and add number rounding on 'blur'
...
this.updateRequest = function() {
amount = $scope.amount;
if (amount != undefined) {
document.getElementById('spcf').onkeypress = function (e) {
// only allow one period in currency
if (e.keyCode === 46 && this.value.split('.').length === 2) {
return false;
}
}
// Remove "." When Last Character and round the number on blur
$("#amount").on("blur", function() {
if (this.value.charAt(this.value.length-1) == ".") {
this.value.replace(".","");
$("#amount").val(this.value);
}
var num = parseFloat(this.value);
// check for 'NaN' if its safe continue
if (!isNaN(num)) {
var num = (Math.round(parseFloat(this.value) * 100) / 100).toFixed(2);
$("#amount").val(num);
}
});
this.data.amountRequested = Math.round(parseFloat(amount) * 100) / 100;
}
...
Just the numbers:
$('input.time').keydown(function(e) {
return e.keyCode >= 48 && e.keyCode <= 57);
});
For time including :
replace 57
with 58
. To also include delete and backspace:
return (e.keyCode >= 46 && e.keyCode <= 58) || e.keyCode == 8;
$(this).val($(this).val().replace(/[^0-9\.]/g,''));
if($(this).val().indexOf('.') == 0) {
$(this).val("");
}
This is the simplest way
indexOf
is used to validate if the input started with .
/**
* Forbids special characters and decimals
* Allows numbers only
* */
const numbersOnly = (evt) => {
let charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : evt.keyCode;
if (charCode === 46 && charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57)) {
return false;
}
let inputResult = /^[0-9]*$/.test(evt.target.value);
if (!inputResult) {
evt.target.value = evt.target.value.replace(/[^a-z0-9\s]/gi, '');
}
return true;
}
In HTML:
<input type="text" (keypress)="omitSpecialChar($event)"/>
In JS:
omitSpecialChar(event) {
const keyPressed = String.fromCharCode(event.keyCode);
const verifyKeyPressed = /^[a-zA-Z\' \u00C0-\u00FF]*$/.test(keyPressed);
return verifyKeyPressed === true;
}
In this example it is possible to type accents.
Allow only numbers in TextBox (Restrict Alphabets and Special Characters)
/* Code:
48-57 - Numbers
8 - Backspace
35 - Home key
36 - End key
37-40 - Arrow keys
46 - Delete key */
function restrictAlphabets(e) {
var x = e.which || e.keycode;
return (x >= 48 && x <= 57) || x == 8 ||
(x >= 35 && x <= 40) || x == 46;
}
Use below code to also restrict special characters
$(h.txtAmount).keydown(function (event) {
if (event.shiftKey) {
event.preventDefault();
}
if (event.keyCode == 46 || event.keyCode == 8) {
}
else {
if (event.keyCode < 95) {
if (event.keyCode < 48 || event.keyCode > 57) {
event.preventDefault();
}
}
else {
if (event.keyCode < 96 || event.keyCode > 105) {
event.preventDefault();
}
}
}
});
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4Code-only answers aren't too useful without an explanation.– VemonusCommented Jan 20, 2017 at 16:40
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#Description').bind('input', function() {
var c = this.selectionStart,
r = /[^a-z0-9 .]/gi,
v = $(this).val();
if (r.test(v)) {
$(this).val(v.replace(r, ''));
c--;
}
this.setSelectionRange(c, c);
if (!(checkEmpty($("#Description").val()))) {
$("#Description").val("");
} //1Apr2022 code end
});
$('#Description').on('change', function() {
if (!(checkEmpty($("#Description").val()))) {
$("#Description").val("");
} //1Apr2022 code end
});
});
function checkEmpty(field) { //1Apr2022 new code
if (field == "" ||
field == null ||
field == "undefinied") {
return false;
} else if (/^\s*$/.test(field)) {
return false;
} else {
return true;
}
}
Try this JavaScript Code it's a simple way to restrict special characters from the input.
Source code: Restrict special characters
$('input').bind('input', function() {
var c = this.selectionStart,
r = /[^a-z0-9 .]/gi,
v = $(this).val();
if(r.test(v)) {
$(this).val(v.replace(r, ''));
c--;
}
this.setSelectionRange(c, c);
});
Here's my one-liner approach...
<input type="text" onkeyup="this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9a-zA-Z \-]/g, '');">
It can handle key presses, copy-pasting and clicks from auto-complete suggestions. There's a momentary appearance of the special characters but will disappear immediately.
A more enhanced form would be:
$('input[type=text]').on('input', function() {
var c = this.selectionStart,
r = /[^a-z ]/gi,
v = $(this).val();
if (r.test(v)) {
$(this).val(v.replace(r, ''));
c--;
}
this.setSelectionRange(c, c);
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
Because it will allow you to enter space as well and it will only target the input fields with type text and wont bother the other input fields like email, password etc as normally we need special characters in email and password field