981

I am creating a web page where I have an input text field in which I want to allow only numeric characters like (0,1,2,3,4,5...9) 0-9.

How can I do this using jQuery?

19
  • 79
    Keep in mind that you cannot rely on client-side validation - you also need to validate on the server in case the user has JavaScript turned off, or isn't using a JavaScript compatible browser.
    – cjk
    Jun 15, 2009 at 9:50
  • 50
    have you considered html5? <input type="number" />. with min and max attributes you can restrict input too
    – ZX12R
    Apr 11, 2012 at 4:33
  • 6
    I think you should check for input values on the keyup event and not check for keycodes, because it's much more reliable across differences in keyboards and what not.
    – Richard
    Jun 20, 2012 at 8:08
  • 14
    I fully agree with Richard: do not use keycodes. The accepted answer does not work on French keyboards, for example, since you need to press "Shift" in order to type numbers on those keyboards. Keycodes are just too risky, IMHO.
    – MiniQuark
    Dec 12, 2012 at 14:15
  • 3
    @ZX12R Doesn't work in any current versions of IE. It's all well and good to use the latest code on your own stuff to keep fresh, but this isn't really an option for almost any professional project. caniuse.com/#feat=input-number
    – Eric
    Mar 20, 2013 at 13:53

69 Answers 69

5

I also would like to answer :)

    $('.justNum').keydown(function(event){
        var kc, num, rt = false;
        kc = event.keyCode;
        if(kc == 8 || ((kc > 47 && kc < 58) || (kc > 95 && kc < 106))) rt = true;
        return rt;
    })
    .bind('blur', function(){
        num = parseInt($(this).val());
        num = isNaN(num) ? '' : num;
        if(num && num < 0) num = num*-1;
        $(this).val(num);
    });

That's it...just numbers. :) Almost it can work just with the 'blur', but...

5

Simple way to check that enter value is numeric is:

var checknumber = $('#textbox_id').val();

    if(jQuery.isNumeric(checknumber) == false){
        alert('Please enter numeric value');
        $('#special_price').focus();
        return;
    }
5

Just need to apply this method in Jquery and you can validate your textbox to just accept number only.

function IsNumberKeyWithoutDecimal(element) {    
var value = $(element).val();
var regExp = "^\\d+$";
return value.match(regExp); 
}

Try this solution here

5

You can try the HTML5 number input:

<input type="number" placeholder="enter the number" min="0" max="9">

This input tag element would now take value only between 0 to 9 as min attribute is set to 0 and max attribute is set to 9.

for more information on visit http://www.w3schools.com/html/html_form_input_types.asp

0
5

You can use the following code.

<input type="text" onkeypress="return event.charCode &gt;= 48 &amp;&amp; event.charCode &lt;= 57">

1
  • Does not prevent pasting invalid content though.
    – Léa Gris
    Mar 5, 2022 at 17:01
4

There is an incredible compatibility issue with using keystrokes to detect the character pressed... see quirksmode to know more about that.

I would suggest using keyup to create your filter because then you have the $(element).val() method you can use to evaluate actual universal characters.

Then you can filter out any NON digits using a regex like:

replace(/[^0-9]/g,'');

This takes care of all issues like shift and paste problems because there is always a keyup and so the value will always be evaluated (unless javascript is turned off).

So... to turn this into JQuery... Here is a little unfinished plugin I'm writing, it is called inputmask and will support more masks when finished. For now it has the digits mask working.

Here it goes...

/**
 * @author Tom Van Schoor
 * @company Tutuka Software
 */
(function($) {
  /**
   * @param {Object}
   * $$options options to override settings
   */
  jQuery.fn.inputmask = function($$options) {
    var $settings = $.extend( {}, $.fn.inputmask.defaults, $$options);

    return this.each(function() {
      // $this is an instance of the element you call the plug-in on
      var $this = $(this);

      /*
       * This plug-in does not depend on the metadata plug-in, but if this
       * plug-in detects the existence of the metadata plug-in it will
       * override options with the metadata provided by that plug-in. Look at
       * the metadata plug-in for more information.
       */
      // o will contain your defaults, overruled by $$options,
      // overruled by the meta-data
      var o = $.metadata ? $.extend( {}, $settings, $this.metadata()) : $settings;

      /*
       * if digits is in the array 'validators' provided by the options,
       * stack this event handler
       */
      if($.inArray('digits', o.validators) != -1) {
        $this.keyup(function(e) {
          $this.val(stripAlphaChars($this.val()));
        });
      }

      /*
       * There is no such things as public methods in jQuery plug-ins since
       * there is no console to perform commands from a client side point of
       * view. Typically only private methods will be fired by registered
       * events as on-click, on-drag, etc... Those registered events could be
       * seen as public methods.
       */

      // private method
      var stripAlphaChars = function(string) {
        var str = new String(string); 
        str = str.replace(/[^0-9]/g, ''); 
        return str;
      }

    });
  };

  // static public functions
  //jQuery.fn.inputmask.doSomething = function(attr) {

  //};

  // static public members
  //jQuery.fn.inputmask.someStaticPublicMember;

  // some default settings that can be overridden by either $$options or
  // metadata
  // If you need callback functions for the plug-in, this is where they get
  // set
  jQuery.fn.inputmask.defaults = {
    validators : []
  };
})(jQuery);

To use it just do:

$('#someElementId').inputmask({
  validators: ['digits','someOtherNotYetImplementedValidator']
});

The 'someOtherNotYetImplementedValidator' is just there to show how this can be expanded for extra future masks/validators. You can add it or leave it out, it doesn't break anything ;-)

Appologies for the extra clutter of comments, I'm using a template I created for the guys here at work.

Hope this helps, Cheers

4
  • Good points about key code compatibility issues and checking the field value. But all we need is this: onkeyup="this.value=this.value.replace(/\D/g,'')". Jun 5, 2011 at 3:48
  • Very true Patrick, it can be done in a one-liner. But for my purposes I needed a validator plugin so I could register more validators like "digits" and "ValidCreditCard", etc... Jun 20, 2011 at 5:59
  • @Patrick Fisher: It's a good idea. The main problem is that the cursor will move to the end with every keystroke, rendering the arrow keys useless. Try $("#inputfield").keypress(function(e) { if (e.which < 48 || e.which > 57) e.preventDefault(); });
    – Gruber
    Jun 5, 2012 at 7:40
  • @Gruber See my comment above, where I suggest if (/\D/g.test(this.value)) this.value = this.value.replace(/\D/g,'') so the value is only changed (and the cursor jumps to the end) if there is an invalid character. That way, you can still use arrow keys. You can also enter numbers in the middle without the cursor moving. Jun 12, 2012 at 3:29
4

If you have to solve diacritics and special characters, try to use this:

$(this).on( 'keypress', function( e )
{
    // Ensure that it is a number and stop the keypress
    if (e.shiftKey || (e.keyCode < 48 || e.keyCode > 57)) {
        e.preventDefault();
    }
});  
4

You can use HTML5 validation on your text inputs by adding a pattern. No need to manually validate with regex or keyCodes.

<input type="text" pattern="[0-9.]+" />

$("input[type=text][pattern]").on("input", function () {
    if (!this.checkValidity())
        this.value = this.value.slice(0, -1);
});

Possible, but not as simple for inputs [type=number]...

The problem with [type="number"] is that we cannot only remove the invalid character at the end. The User Agents return an empty string whenever the input is invalid.

From the W3C HTML5 spec:

If the value of the element is not a valid floating point number, then set it to the empty string instead.

https://dev.w3.org/html5/spec-LC/number-state.html#number-state

This means we need a way to store the previous input value by hand.

So for number inputs, the solution would look like this:

$("input[type=number], input[type=text][pattern]").on("input", function () {
    if (!this.checkValidity())
        this.value = $(this).data("current-valid") || "";
    else
        $(this).data("current-valid", this.value);
});

Unfortunately, this will not work on IE and EDGE. We need to resort to the pattern solution above for these browsers. However, you can still use number inputs with this simple polyfill.

$("input[type=number]").attr("type", "text").attr("pattern", "[0-9.]+");
3

To elaborate a little more on answer #3 I'd do the following (NOTE: still does not support paste oprations through keyboard or mouse):

$('#txtNumeric').keypress(
            function(event) {
                //Allow only backspace and delete
                if (event.keyCode != 46 && event.keyCode != 8) {
                    if (!parseInt(String.fromCharCode(event.which))) {
                        event.preventDefault();
                    }
                }
            }
        );
3

I had a problem with the top-answer. It doesn't include the numerical keypad and if one presses shift+number the special-signs shouldn't be displayed either.. but this solution doesn't take care of it.

The best link I've found in this thread was this: http://www.west-wind.com/weblog/posts/2011/Apr/22/Restricting-Input-in-HTML-Textboxes-to-Numeric-Values

I'm new to stackoverflow so I don't know if I can just edit the better solution into the top-post.

3

Here is way with regular expression:

$('input').bind('keypress', function (event) {
var regex = new RegExp("^[0-9]+$");
var key = String.fromCharCode(!event.charCode ? event.which : event.charCode);
if (!regex.test(key)) {
   event.preventDefault();
   return false;
}

});

https://jsfiddle.net/astrapi69/qbk2vjty/1/

And you can change the regular expression to anything else if you want to restrict other characters then numbers.

1
  • This was the only code that worked on IE to prevent chars for input number. I also added a validation for maxlength that doesn't work in some browsers. (Ex. if (!regex.test(key) || this.value.length == this.maxLength) ) May 25, 2016 at 14:09
3

Updated solution for a better user experience, that addresses the copy+paste issue and replaces the deprecated keyCode attribute:

HTML

<input type="tel">

jQuery

$('[type=tel]').on('change', function(e) {
  $(e.target).val($(e.target).val().replace(/[^\d]/g, ''))
})
$('[type=tel]').on('keypress', function(e) {
  keys = ['0','1','2','3','4','5','6','7','8','9']
  return keys.indexOf(event.key) > -1
})

Details:

First of all, input types:

number shows up/down arrows shrinking the actual input space, I find them ugly and are only useful if the number represents a quantity (things like phones, area codes, IDs... don't need them) tel provides similar browser validations of number without arrows

Using [number / tel] also helps showing numeric keyboard on mobile devices.

For the JS validation I ended up needing 2 functions, one for the normal user input (keypress) and the other for a copy+paste fix (change), other combinations would give me a terrible user experience.

I use the more reliable KeyboardEvent.key instead of the now deprecated KeyboardEvent.charCode

And depending of your browser support you can consider using Array.prototype.includes() instead of the poorly named Array.prototype.indexOf() (for true / false results)

3

This jQuery code filters out characters typed while Shift, Ctrl or Alt is held down.

$('#AmountText').keydown(function (e) {
    if (e.shiftKey || e.ctrlKey || e.altKey) { // if shift, ctrl or alt keys held down
        e.preventDefault();         // Prevent character input
    } else {
        var n = e.keyCode;
        if (!((n == 8)              // backspace
        || (n == 46)                // delete
        || (n >= 35 && n <= 40)     // arrow keys/home/end
        || (n >= 48 && n <= 57)     // numbers on keyboard
        || (n >= 96 && n <= 105))   // number on keypad
        ) {
            e.preventDefault();     // Prevent character input
        }
    }
});
2

It may be overkill for what you are looking for, yet I suggest a jQuery plugin called autoNumeric() - it is great!

You can limit to only numbers, decimal precision, max / min values and more.

http://www.decorplanit.com/plugin/

2

add below code in document.ready

    $('.class of text box').keyup(function () 
    {
    this.value = this.value.replace(/[^0-9]/g, '');
    });  
2

You can use HTML5 input type number to restrict only number entries:

<input type="number" name="someid" />

This will work only in HTML5 complaint browser. Make sure your html document's doctype is:

<!DOCTYPE html>

For general purpose, you can have JS validation as below:

function isNumberKey(evt){
    var charCode = (evt.which) ? evt.which : event.keyCode
    if (charCode > 31 && (charCode < 48 || charCode > 57))
        return false;
    return true;
}

<input type="someid" name="number" onkeypress="return isNumberKey(event)"/>

If you want to allow decimals replace the "if condition" with this:

if (charCode > 31 && (charCode != 46 &&(charCode < 48 || charCode > 57)))

Source: HTML Text Input allow only Numeric input

JSFiddle demo: http://jsfiddle.net/Gagan_Gami/nSjy7/333/

2

Many people here are using keycode property which is not easy to remember. If you do not have a locale issues then you can simply use key which is actually the input that user types.

See this Fiddle

$("#txt").on("keypress",function(e){
  console.log("Entered Key is " + e.key);
  switch (e.key)
     {
         case "1":
         case "2":
         case "3":
         case "4":
         case "5":
         case "6":
         case "7":
         case "8":
         case "9":
         case "0":
         case "Backspace":
             return true;
             break;

         case ".":
             if ($(this).val().indexOf(".") == -1) //Checking if it already contains decimal. You can Remove this condition if you do not want to include decimals in your input box.
             {
                 return true;
             }
             else
             {
                 return false;
             }
             break;

         default:
             return false;
     }
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

Enter Value
<input id="txt" type="text" />

issue then see the following simple code.

Please note that this example also contains validation for decimal entry.

As per this question it is not required so you can simply remove the case "." to remove entry of decimal.

1
/**
Makes the textbox to accept only numeric input
*/

(function($) {
    $.fn.allowOnlyNumeric = function() {

        /**
        The interval code is commented as every 250 ms onchange of the textbox gets fired.
        */

        //  var createDelegate = function(context, method) {
        //      return function() { method.apply(context, arguments); };
        //  };

        /**
        Checks whether the key is only numeric.
        */
        var isValid = function(key) {
            var validChars = "0123456789";
            var validChar = validChars.indexOf(key) != -1;
            return validChar;
        };

        /**
        Fires the key down event to prevent the control and alt keys
        */
        var keydown = function(evt) {
            if (evt.ctrlKey || evt.altKey) {
                evt.preventDefault();
            }
        };

        /**
        Fires the key press of the text box   
        */
        var keypress = function(evt) {
            var scanCode;
            //scanCode = evt.which;
            if (evt.charCode) { //For ff
                scanCode = evt.charCode;
            }
            else { //For ie
                scanCode = evt.keyCode;
            }

            if (scanCode && scanCode >= 0x20 /* space */) {
                var c = String.fromCharCode(scanCode);
                if (!isValid(c)) {
                    evt.preventDefault();
                }
            }
        };

        /**
        Fires the lost focus event of the textbox   
        */
        var onchange = function() {
            var result = [];
            var enteredText = $(this).val();
            for (var i = 0; i < enteredText.length; i++) {
                var ch = enteredText.substring(i, i + 1);
                if (isValid(ch)) {
                    result.push(ch);
                }
            }
            var resultString = result.join('');
            if (enteredText != resultString) {
                $(this).val(resultString);
            }

        };

        //var _filterInterval = 250;
        //var _intervalID = null;

        //var _intervalHandler = null;

        /**
        Dispose of the textbox to unbind the events.
        */
        this.dispose = function() {
            $(this).die('change', onchange);
            $(this).die('keypress', keypress);
            $(this).die('keydown', keydown);
            //window.clearInterval(_intervalHandler);
        };

        $(this).live('change', onchange);
        $(this).live('keypress', keypress);
        $(this).live('keydown', keydown);
        //_intervalHandler = createDelegate(this, onchange);
        //_intervalID = window.setInterval(_intervalHandler, _filterInterval);
    }
})(jQuery);

The above $ plugin is written from the AjaxControlToolkit filter textbox extender.js.

However one behavior is not borrowed from the AjaxControlToolkit is that when the user copies and pastes any non-numeric value then the onchange event fires up and text box eats up the values. I went through the code and found out for this onchange was called after every 250ms, which is a performance hit, hence commented that part.

1

This answer was perfect, but we can even make it better and more powerful by combining it with the jQuery.Validation plugin.

By using the number() method, we can develop something like this:

$('.numberOnly').keydown(function (event) { 
  if ((!event.shiftKey && !event.ctrlKey && !event.altKey) && 
    ((event.keyCode >= 48 && event.keyCode <= 57) || (event.keyCode >= 96 && event.keyCode <= 105))) 
  // 0-9 or numpad 0-9, disallow shift, ctrl, and alt 
  { 
    // check textbox value now and tab over if necessary 
  } 
  else if (event.keyCode != 8 && event.keyCode != 13 && event.keyCode != 46 && event.keyCode != 37 
    && event.keyCode != 39 && event.keyCode != 9 && event.keyCode != 109 
    && event.keyCode != 189 && event.keyCode != 110 && event.keyCode != 190) 
  // not backsapce (8), enter (13), del (46), left arrow (37), right arrow (39), tab (9), negetive sign (- : 109, 189), or point (. : 110, 190) 
  { 
    event.preventDefault(); 
  } 
  // else the key should be handled normally 
}); 
// _____________________________________________
jQuery.validator.setDefaults({ 
  debug: true, 
  success: "valid" 
}); 
// _____________________________________________
$(document).ready(function(){ 
  $('#myFormId').validate({ 
    rules: { 
      field: { 
        required: true, 
        number: true 
      } 
    } 
  }); 
}); 

So, any Textbox in the "#myFormId" form, with "numberOnly" class, accept only number including decimal, float, and even negative number. Voila :)

PS: In my case, for some reason I used jQuery.validator.addMethod() instead of .validate():

jQuery.validator.addMethod("numberOnly", function (value, element) { 
var result = !isNaN(value); 
return this.optional(element) || result; 
}, jQuery.format("Please enter a valid number.")); 

(it works fine inside my ASP.NET MVC 3 project + unobtrusive JavaScript validation, hooooooooray!)

1

None of the answers worked in my case so I made a little change in the accepted answer to make it work for Dynamically added elements.

Enjoy :

var inputFilter = function (elem, cb) {
    /*
    *    /^-?\d*$/               restricts input to integer numbers
    *    /^\d*$/                 restricts input to unsigned integer numbers
    *    /^[0-9a-f]*$/i          restricts input to hexadecimal numbers
    *    /^-?\d*[.,]?\d*$/       restricts input to floating point numbers (allowing both . and , as decimal separator)
    *    /^-?\d*[.,]?\d{0,2}$/   restricts input to currency values (i.e. at most two decimal places)
    */
    bdy.on('input keydown keyup mousedown mouseup select contextmenu drop', elem, function () {
        if (cb(this.value)) {
            this.oldValue = this.value;
            this.oldSelectionStart = this.selectionStart;
            this.oldSelectionEnd = this.selectionEnd;
        } else if (this.hasOwnProperty('oldValue')) {
            this.value = this.oldValue;
            this.setSelectionRange(this.oldSelectionStart, this.oldSelectionEnd);
        }
    });
};

Usage :

inputFilter('#onlyDigitsInput', function (val) {
    return /^\d*$/.test(val);
});
1

The SIMPLEST solution to this is within your html form code add:

<input type="number"

If it's a php form then add:

$data = array(
        'type' => 'number',

Both of these

  1. stops the user from typing a comma
  2. stops the user from pasting a comma (it pastes the number but strips the comma)
0

I recommend to check event.metaKey as well. If that's set to true, the user might be doing something like cmd-A to select all the text in the field. You should allow that too.

0

I'm using in this form. Seems correct to me allow keys like home, end, shift and ctrl, with the drawback of the user to can print special chars:

$("#busca_cep").keydown(function(event) {
    if ( event.keyCode == 46 || event.keyCode == 8 || event.keyCode == 13 || event.keyCode == 16 || event.keyCode == 36 || event.keyCode == 35) {
        if (event.keyCode == 13) {
            localiza_cep(this.value);
        }
    } else {
        if ((event.keyCode < 48 || event.keyCode > 57) && (event.keyCode < 96 || event.keyCode > 105 )) {
            event.preventDefault(); 
        }   
    }
});
0
0

Another approach is below. This will take care of pasting also. [it is for alpha-numeric validation]

//Input Validation
var existingLogDescription = "";

$('.logDescription').keydown(function (event) {
    existingLogDescription = this.value;

});


$('.logDescription').keyup(function () {
    if (this.value.match(/[^a-zA-Z0-9 ]/g)) {
        alert("Log Description should contain alpha-numeric values only");
        this.value = this.value.replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9 ]/g, '');
        this.value = existingLogDescription;
    }
});
0
jQuery("#no_of").keypress(function(event){
    //Allow only backspace and delete
    if (event.keyCode != 46 && event.keyCode != 8) {
        if (!parseInt(String.fromCharCode(event.which))) {
            event.preventDefault();
        }
    }
});

jQuery("#no_of").keyup(function(e){
    var temp_s= jQuery("#no_of").val();
    var multiply_val= temp_s*10;
    jQuery("#ex-r").html(multiply_val);
});
0

Check if decimal point already used:-

        // Stop: Multiple decimal points
        if((e.keyCode == 190 || e.keyCode == 110) && ((this.value).indexOf(".") >= 0))
            e.preventDefault(); 
0
$(document).ready(function()
{
    $("#textBoxId").bind("change",checkInput);
});

function checkInput()
{
    // check if $('#textBoxId').val() is under your constraints
    // then change its value, removing the last character
    // since this event will be called each time you
    // type a character
}
0

Refactored the accepted answer so that comments no longer need to used because I hate comments. Also this is easier to test with jasmine.

    allowBackspaceDeleteTabEscapeEnterPress: function(event){
    return ($.inArray(event.keyCode, [46, 8, 9, 27, 13, 190]) >= 0);
},
allowContorlAPress: function(event){
    return (event.keyCode == 65 && event.ctrlKey === true)
},
allowHomeEndLeftRightPress: function(event){
    return (event.keyCode >= 35 && event.keyCode <= 39)
},
theKeyPressedIsEditRelated: function (event) {
    return (this.allowBackspaceDeleteTabEscapeEnterPress(event)
            || this.allowContorlAPress(event)
            || this.allowHomeEndLeftRightPress(event));
},
isNotFromTheNumKeyPad: function (event) {
    return (event.keyCode < 96 || event.keyCode > 105);
},
isNotFromTopRowNumberKeys: function (event) {
    return (event.keyCode < 48 || event.keyCode > 57);
},
theKeyIsNonNumeric: function (event) {
   return (event.shiftKey
           || (this.isNotFromTopRowNumberKeys(event)
                && this.isNotFromTheNumKeyPad(event)));
},
bindInputValidator: function(){
    $('.myinputclassselector').keydown(function (event) {
        if(this.validateKeyPressEvent(event)) return false;
    });
},
validateKeyPressEvent: function(event){
    if(this.theKeyPressedIsEditRelated(event)){
        return;
    } else {
        if (this.theKeyIsNonNumeric(event)) {
            event.preventDefault();
        }
    }
}
0

Use below simple jQuery to allow only numeric characters in a tetbox. You do not need to filter all the special characters manually so there is no danger of missing some special char. This will allow only numbers 0-9: (Place below code in document ready and change the class name as per your numeric text fields class name.)

//Event of data being keyed in to textbox with class="numericField".
$(".numericField").keyup(function() {
    // Get the non Numeric char that was enetered
    var nonNumericChars = $(this).val().replace(/[0-9]/g, '');                                  
    // Now set the value in text box 
    $(this).val( $(this).val().replace(nonNumericChars, ''));    

});
0

I have combined all the answers in one and come up with the following code:

jQuery('#input_id', function(e){
    // Allow: backspace, delete, tab, escape, enter
    if (jQuery.inArray(e.keyCode, [46, 8, 9, 27, 13, 110]) !== -1 ||
        // Allow: Ctrl+A
        (e.keyCode === 65 && e.ctrlKey === true) ||
        // Allow: Ctrl+C
        (e.keyCode === 67 && e.ctrlKey === true) ||
        // Allow: Ctrl+X
        (e.keyCode === 88 && e.ctrlKey === true) ||
        // Disallow several dots (allow 190 only if no dots found)
        (e.keyCode === 190 && jQuery(this).val().indexOf('.') == -1) ||
        // Bug in some Android devices where it is always 229
        (e.keyCode === 229) ||
        // Allow: home, end, left, right
        (e.keyCode >= 35 && e.keyCode <= 40)) {
        // let it happen, don't do anything
        return;
    }
    // Ensure that it is a number and stop the keypress
    if ((e.shiftKey || (e.keyCode < 48 || e.keyCode > 57)) && (e.keyCode < 96 || e.keyCode > 105)) {
        e.preventDefault();
    }
});

In addition the form should have autocomplete="off". Without this option you might have issues with auto-complete algorithms on mobile devices.

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