Adding a padding to the bottom of the page that is large enough for the keyboard enables content to be displayed as desired when the keyboard is visible.
By adding the attribute readonly (or readonly="readonly" ) to the input field you should prevent anyone typing anything in it, but still be able to launch a click event on it.
Scott S's answer worked perfectly.
I was coding a web-based phone dialpad for mobile, and every time the user would press a number on the keypad (composed of td span elements in a table), the softkeyboard would pop up. I also wanted the user to not be able to tap into the input box of the number being dialed. This actually solved both problems in 1 shot. The following was used:
<input type="text" id="phone-number" onfocus="blur();" />
Since the soft keyboard is part of the OS, more often than not, you won't be able to hide it - also, on iOS, hiding the keyboard drops focus from the element.
However, if you use the onFocus
attribute on the input, and then blur()
the text input immediately, the keyboard will hide itself and the onFocus
event can set a variable to define which text input was focused last.
Then alter your on-page keyboard to only alter the last-focused (check using the variable) text input, rather than simulating a key press.
For further readers/searchers:
As Rene Pot points out on this topic,
By adding the attribute
readonly
(orreadonly="readonly"
) to the input field you should prevent anyone typing anything in it, but still be able to launch a click event on it.
With this method, you can avoid popping up the "soft" Keyboard and still launch click events / fill the input by any on-screen keyboard.
This solution also works fine with date-time-pickers which generally already implement controls.
I'm very confused as to why no one has put this... maybe I'm misunderstanding the question but,
<input inputmode="none" />
Those answers aren't bad, but they are limited in that they don't actually allow you to enter data. We had a similar problem where we were using barcode readers to enter data into a field, but we wanted to suppress the keyboard.
This is what I put together, it works pretty well:
https://codepen.io/bobjase/pen/QrQQvd/
<!-- must be a select box with no children to suppress the keyboard -->
input: <select id="hiddenField" />
<span id="fakecursor" />
<input type="text" readonly="readonly" id="visibleField" />
<div id="cursorMeasuringDiv" />
#hiddenField {
height:17px;
width:1px;
position:absolute;
margin-left:3px;
margin-top:2px;
border:none;
border-width:0px 0px 0px 1px;
}
#cursorMeasuringDiv {
position:absolute;
visibility:hidden;
margin:0px;
padding:0px;
}
#hiddenField:focus {
border:1px solid gray;
border-width:0px 0px 0px 1px;
outline:none;
animation-name: cursor;
animation-duration: 1s;
animation-iteration-count: infinite;
}
@keyframes cursor {
from {opacity:0;}
to {opacity:1;}
}
// whenever the visible field gets focused
$("#visibleField").bind("focus", function(e) {
// silently shift the focus to the hidden select box
$("#hiddenField").focus();
$("#cursorMeasuringDiv").css("font", $("#visibleField").css("font"));
});
// whenever the user types on his keyboard in the select box
// which is natively supported for jumping to an <option>
$("#hiddenField").bind("keypress",function(e) {
// get the current value of the readonly field
var currentValue = $("#visibleField").val();
// and append the key the user pressed into that field
$("#visibleField").val(currentValue + e.key);
$("#cursorMeasuringDiv").text(currentValue + e.key);
// measure the width of the cursor offset
var offset = 3;
var textWidth = $("#cursorMeasuringDiv").width();
$("#hiddenField").css("marginLeft",Math.min(offset+textWidth,$("#visibleField").width()));
});
When you click in the <input>
box, it simulates a cursor in that box but really puts the focus on an empty <select>
box. Select boxes naturally allow for keypresses to support jumping to an element in the list so it was only a matter of rerouting the keypress to the original input and offsetting the simulated cursor.
This won't work for backspace, delete, etc... but we didn't need those. You could probably use jQuery's trigger to send the keyboard event directly to another input box somewhere but we didn't need to bother with that so I didn't do it.
example how i made it , After i fill a Maximum length it will blur from my Field (and the Keyboard will disappear ) , if you have more than one field , you can just add the line that i add '//'
var MaxLength = 8;
$(document).ready(function () {
$('#MyTB').keyup(function () {
if ($(this).val().length >= MaxLength) {
$('#MyTB').blur();
// $('#MyTB2').focus();
}
}); });
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