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blur event.relatedTarget returns null

I have an <input type="text"> field and I need to clear it when this field loses focus (whiech means that user clicked somewhere on the page). But there is one exception. Input text field should't be cleared when user clicks on a specific element.

I tried to use event.relatedTarget to detect if user clicked not just somewhere but on my specific <div>.

However as you can see in snippet below, it simply doesn't work. event.relatedTarget is always returning null!

function lose_focus(event) {    if(event.relatedTarget === null) {      document.getElementById('text-field').value = '';    }  }
.special {    width: 200px;    height: 100px;    background: #ccc;    border: 1px solid #000;    margin: 25px 0;    padding: 15px;  }  .special:hover {    cursor: pointer;  }
<input id="text-field" type="text" onblur="lose_focus(event)" placeholder="Type something...">    <div class="special">Clicking here should not cause clearing!</div>
like image 584
CMTV Avatar asked Mar 13 '17 13:03

CMTV


People also ask

Why is event relatedTarget null?

Explanation: event. relatedTarget contains an element that gained focus. And the problem is that your specific div can't gain a focus because browser thinks that this element is not a button/field or some kind of a control element.

What is event relatedTarget?

The relatedTarget property returns the element related to the element that triggered the mouse event. The relatedTargert property can be used with the mouseover event to indicate the element the cursor just exited, or with the mouseout event to indicate the element the cursor just entered.


1 Answers

Short answer: add tabindex="0" attribute to an element that should appear in event.relatedTarget.

Explanation: event.relatedTarget contains an element that gained focus. And the problem is that your specific div can't gain a focus because browser thinks that this element is not a button/field or some kind of a control element.

Here are the elements that can gain focus by default:

  • <a> elements with href attribute specified
  • <link> elements with href attribute specified
  • <button> elements
  • <input> elements that are not hidden
  • <select> elements
  • <textarea> elements
  • <menuitem> elements
  • elements with attribue draggable
  • <audio> and <video> elements with controls attribute specified

So event.relatedTarget will contain above elements when onblur happens. All other elements will are not counted and clicking on them will put null in event.relatedTarget.

But it is possible to change this behaviour. You can 'mark' DOM element as element that can gain focus with tabindex attribute. Here is what standart says:

The tabindex content attribute allows authors to indicate that an element is supposed to be focusable, whether it is supposed to be reachable using sequential focus navigation and, optionally, to suggest where in the sequential focus navigation order the element appears.

So here is the corrected code snippet:

function lose_focus(event) {    if(event.relatedTarget === null) {      document.getElementById('text-field').value = '';    }  }
.special {    width: 200px;    height: 100px;    background: #ccc;    border: 1px solid #000;    margin: 25px 0;    padding: 15px;  }  .special:hover {    cursor: pointer;  }
<input id="text-field" type="text" onblur="lose_focus(event)" placeholder="Type something...">    <div tabindex="0" class="special">Clicking here should not cause clearing!</div>
like image 138
CMTV Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 13:09

CMTV