HTML

Chapter 17: Input Control Elements

ParameterDetails
classIndicates the Class of the input
idndicates the ID of the input
typeIdentifies the type of input control to display. Acceptable values are hidden, text, tel, url, email,
password, date, time, number, range, color, checkbox, radio, file, submit, image, reset, and button.
Defaults to text if not specified, if the value is invalid, or if the browser does not support the type
specified.
nameIndicates the name of the input
disabledBoolean value that indicates the input should be disabled. Disabled controls cannot be edited, are
not sent on form submission, and cannot receive focus.
checkedWhen the value of the type attribute is radio or checkbox, the presence of this Boolean attribute
indicates that the control is selected by default; otherwise it is ignored.
multipleHTML5 Indicates multiple files or values can be passed (Applies only to file and email type inputs )
placeholderHTML5 A hint to the user of what can be entered in the control . The placeholder text must not
contain carriage returns or line-feeds
autocompleteHTML5 Indicates whether the value of the control can be automatically completed by the browser.
readonlyBoolean value that indicates the input is not editable. Readonly controls are still sent on form
submission, but will not receive focus. HTML5: This attribute is ignored when the value of type
attribute is either set to hidden, range, color, checkbox, radio, file or button.
requiredHTML5 Indicates a value must be present or the element must be checked in order for the form to
be submitted
altAn alternative text for images, in case they are not displayed.
autofocusThe <input> element should get the focus when page loads.
valueSpecifies the value of <input> element.
stepThe step attribute specifies the legal number intervals. It works with the following input types:
number, range, date, datetime-local, month, time and week.

A key component of interactive web systems, input tags are HTML elements designed to take a specific form of
input from users. Different types of input elements can regulate the data entered to fit a specified format and
provide security to password entry.

Text

The most basic input type and the default input if no type is specified. This input type defines a single-line text field with line-breaks automatically removed from the input value. All other characters can be entered into this. <input> elements are used within a <form> element to declare input controls that allow users to input data.

Syntax

<input type="text">

or (without specifying a type, using the default attribute):

<input>

The default width of a text field input is 20 characters. This can be changed by specifying a value for the size
attribute like this:

<input type="text" size="50">

The size attribute is distinctly different than setting a width with CSS. Using a width defines a specific value (in
number of pixel, percentage of the parent element, etc.) that the input must always be wide. Using the size
calculates the amount of width to allocate based on the font being used and how wide the characters normally are.

Note: Using the size attribute does not inherently limit the number of characters which can be entered into the
box, only how wide the box is displayed. For limiting the length, see Input Validation.

An input field only allows one line of text. If you need a multi-line text input for substantial amount of text, use a <textarea> element instead.

Checkbox and Radio Buttons

Overview

Checkboxes and radio buttons are written with the HTML tag , and their behavior is defined in the HTML specification.

The simplest checkbox or radio button is an <input> element with a type attribute of checkbox or radio, respectively:

<input type="checkbox">
<input type="radio">

A single stand-alone checkbox element is used for a single binary option such as a yes-or-no question. Checkboxes
are independent, meaning the user may select as many choices as they would like in a group of checkboxes. In
other words, checking one checkbox does not uncheck the other checkboxes in checkbox group.

Radio buttons usually come in groups (if it’s not grouped with another radio button, you probably meant to use a
checkbox instead) identified by using the same name attribute on all buttons within that group. The selection of
radio buttons are mutually exclusive, meaning the user may only select one choice from a group of radio buttons.
When a radio button is checked, any other radio button with the same name that was previously checked becomes
unchecked.

Example:

<input type="radio" name="color" id="red" value="#F00">
<input type="radio" name="color" id="green" value="#0F0">
<input type="radio" name="color" id="blue" value="#00F">

When viewed, radio buttons appear as a circle (unchecked) or a filled circle (checked). Checkboxes appear as a
square (unchecked) or a filled square (checked). Depending on the browser and operating system, the square
sometimes has rounded corners.

Attributes

checkboxes and radio buttons have a number of attributes to control their behavior:

value

Like any other input element, the value attribute specifies the string value to associate with the button in the event
of form submission. However, checkboxes and radio buttons are special in that when the value is omitted, it
defaults to on when submitted, rather than sending a blank value. The value attribute is not reflected in the
button’s appearance.

checked

The checked attribute specifies the initial state of a checkbox or radio button. This is a boolean attribute and may
be omitted.

Each of these are valid, equivalent ways to define a checked radio button:

<input checked>
<input checked="">
<input checked="checked">
<input checked="ChEcKeD">

The absence of the checked attribute is the only valid syntax for an unchecked button:

<input type="radio">
<input type="checkbox">

When resetting a <form>, checkboxes and radio buttons revert to the state of their checked attribute.

Accessibility

Labels

To give context to the buttons and show users what each button is for, each of them should have a label. This can be done using a <label> element to wrap the button. Also, this makes the label clickable, so you select the corresponding button.

Example:

<label>
 <input type="radio" name="color" value="#F00">
 Red
</label>

or with a <label> element with a for attribute set to the id attribute of the button:

<input type="checkbox" name="color" value="#F00" id="red">
<label for="red">Red</label>

Button Groups

Since each radio button affects the others in the group, it is common to provide a label or context for the entire
group of radio buttons.

To provide a label for the entire group, the radio buttons should be included in a <fieldset> element with a <legend> element within it.

Example:

<fieldset>
 <legend>Theme color:</legend>
 <p>
 <input type="radio" name="color" id="red" value="#F00">
 <label for="red">Red</label>
 </p>
 <p>
 <input type="radio" name="color" id="green" value="#0F0">
 <label for="green">Green</label>
 </p>GoalKicker.com – HTML5 Notes for Professionals 46
 <p>
 <input type="radio" name="color" id="blue" value="#00F">
 <label for="blue">Blue</label>
 </p>
</fieldset>

Checkboxes can also be grouped in a similar fashion, with a fieldset and legend identifying the group of related
checkboxes. However, keep in mind that checkboxes should not share the same name because they are not
mutually exclusive. Doing this will result in the form submitting multiple values for the same key and not all serverside languages handle this in the same way (undefined behavior). Each checkbox should either have a unique
name, or use a set of square brackets ([]) to indicate that the form should submit an array of values for that key.
Which method you choose should depend on how you plan to handle the form data client-side or server-side. You
should also keep the legend short, since some combinations of browsers and screen readers read the legend
before each input field in the fieldset.

Input Validation

HTML input validation is done automatically by the browser based on special attributes on the input element. It
could partially or completely replace JavaScript input validation. This kind of validation can be circumvented by the
user via specially crafted HTTP requests, so it does not replace server-side input validation. The validation only
occurs when attempting to submit the form, so all restricted inputs must be inside a form in order for validation to
occur (unless you’re using JavaScript). Keep in mind that inputs which are disabled or read-only will not trigger
validation.

Some newer input types (like email, url, tel, date and many more ) are automatically validated and do not require
your own validation constraints.

Version ≥ 5
Required

Use the required attribute to indicate that a field must be completed in order to pass validation.

<input required>

Minimum / Maximum Length

Use the minlength and maxlength attributes to indicate length requirements. Most browsers will prevent the user
from typing more than max characters into the box, preventing them from making their entry invalid even before
they attempt submission.

<input minlength="3">
<input maxlength="15">
<input minlength="3" maxlength="15">

Specifying a range

Use min and max attributes to restrict the range of numbers a user can input into an input of type number or range

Marks: <input type="number" size="6" name="marks" min="0" max="100" />
Subject Feedback: <input type="range" size="2" name="feedback" min="1" max="5" />

Version ≥ 5
Match a Pattern

For more control, use the pattern attribute to specify any regular expression that must be matched in order to
pass validation. You can also specify a title, which is included in the validation message if the field doesn’t pass.

<input pattern="\d*" title="Numbers only, please.">

Here’s the message shown in Google Chrome version 51 when attempting to submit the form with an invalid value
inside this field:

Not all browsers display a message for invalid patterns, although there is full support among most used modern
browsers.

Check the latest support on CanIUse and implement accordingly.

Version ≥ 5
Accept File Type

For input fields of type file, it is possible to accept only certain types of files, such as videos, images, audios,
specific file extensions, or certain media types. For example:

<input type="file" accept="image/*" title="Only images are allowed">

Multiple values can be specified with a comma, e.g.:

<input type="file" accept="image/*,.rar,application/zip">

Note: Adding novalidate attribute to the form element or formnovalidate attribute to the submit button, prevents
validation on form elements. For example:

<form>
 <input type="text" name="name" required>
 <input type="email" name="email" required>
 <input pattern="\d*" name="number" required>
 <input type="submit" value="Publish"> <!-- form will be validated -->
 <input type="submit" value="Save" formnovalidate> <!-- form will NOT be validated -->
</form>

The form has fields that are required for “publishing” the draft but aren’t required for “saving” the draft.

Color

Version ≥ 5

<input type="color" name="favcolor" value="#ff0000">

In supporting browsers, the input element with a type attribute whose value is color creates a button-like control,
with a color equal to the value of color attribute (defaults to black if value is not specified or is an invalid
hexadecimal format).

Clicking this button opens the operating system’s color widget, which allows user to select a color.

Fallback for browsers which do not support this input type is a regular input type=text.

Password

<input type="password" name="password">

The input element with a type attribute whose value is password creates a single-line text field similar to the input
type=text, except that text is not displayed as the user enters it.

<input type="password" name="password" placeholder="Password">

Placeholder text is shown in plain text and is overwritten automatically when a user starts typing.

Note: Some browsers and systems modify the default behavior of the password field to also display the most
recently typed character for a short duration, like so:

File

<input type="file" name="fileSubmission">

File inputs allow users to select a file from their local filesystem for use with the current page. If used in conjunction
with a form element, they can be used to allow users to upload files to a server (for more info see Uploading Files).

The following example allows users to use the file input to select a file from their filesystem and upload that file to
a script on the server named upload_file.php.

<form action="upload_file.php" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
 Select file to upload:
 <input type="file" name="fileSubmission" id="fileSubmission">
 <input type="submit" value="Upload your file" name="submit">
</form>

Multiple files

Adding the multiple attribute the user will be able to select more than one file:

<input type="file" name="fileSubmission" id="fileSubmission" multiple>

Accept Files

Accept attribute specifies the types of files that user can select. E.g. .png, .gif, .jpeg.

<input type="file" name="fileSubmission" accept="image/x-png,image/gif,image/jpeg" />

Button

<input type="button" value="Button Text">

Buttons can be used for triggering actions to occur on the page, without submitting the form. You can also use the <button> element if you require a button that can be more easily styled or contain other elements:

<button type="button">Button Text</button>

Buttons are typically used with an “onclick” event:

<input type="button" >



or

<button type="button" >



Attributes
[name]

The name of the button, which is submitted with the form data.

[type]

The type of the button.

Possible values are:

submit : The button submits the form data to the server. This is the default if the attribute is not specified, or if the
attribute is dynamically changed to an empty or invalid value.

reset : The button resets all the controls to their initial values.

button : The button has no default behavior. It can have client-side scripts associated with the element’s events,
which are triggered when the events occur.

menu : The button opens a popup menu defined via its designated element.

[value]

The initial value of the button.
Version ≥ 5

Extra Attributes for Submit Buttons

AttributeDescription
formSpecifies the ID of the form the button belongs to.
If none is specified, it will belong to its ancestor form element (if one exists).
formactionSpecifies where to send the form-data
when the form is submitted using this button.
formenctypeSpecifies how the form-data should be encoded
when submitting it to the server using this button.
Can only be used with formmethod=”post”.
formmethodSpecifies the HTTP method to use (POST or GET)
when sending form-data using this button.
formnovalidateSpecifies that the form-data should not be validated on submission.
formtargetSpecifies where to display the response that is received
after submitting the form using this button.

Submit

<input type="submit" value="Submit">

A submit input creates a button which submits the form it is inside when clicked.

You can also use the <button> element if you require a submit button that can be more easily styled or contain other elements:

<button type="submit">
 <img src="submit-icon.jpg" /> Submit
</button>

Reset

<input type="reset" value="Reset">

An input of type reset creates a button which, when clicked, resets all inputs in the form it is contained in to their
default state.

  • Text in an input field will be reset to blank or its default value (specified using the value attribute).
  • Any option(s) in a selection menu will be deselected unless they have the selected attribute.
  • All checkboxes and radio boxes will be deselected unless they have the checked attribute.

Note: A reset button must be inside or attached to (via the form attribute) a element in order to have any effect. The button will only reset the elements within this form.

Hidden

<input type="hidden" name="inputName" value="inputValue">

A hidden input won’t be visible to the user, but its value will be sent to the server when the form is submitted nonetheless.

Tel

<input type="tel" value="+8400000000">

The input element with a type attribute whose value is tel represents a one-line plain-text edit control for entering a telephone number.

Email

Version ≥ 5
The <input type=“email”> is used for input fields that should contain an e-mail address.

<form>  
<label>E-mail: <label>  
<input type="email" name="email"> 
</form>

E-mail address can be automatically validated when submitted depending on browser support.

Number

Version ≥ 5

<input type="number" value="0" name="quantity">

The Input element with a type attribute whose value is number represents a precise control for setting the element’s value to a string representing a number.

Please note that this field does not guarantee to have a correct number. It just allows all the symbols which could be used in any real number, for example user will be able to enter value like e1e-,0.

Range

Version ≥ 5

<input type="range" min="" max="" step="" />

A control for entering a number whose exact value is not important.

AttributeDescriptionDefault value
minMinimum value for range0
maxMaximum value for range100
stepAmount to increase by on each increment.1

Version ≥ 5
Input type search is used for textual search. It will add magnifier symbol next to space for text on most browsers

<input type="search" name="googlesearch">

Image

<input type="image" src="img.png" alt="image_name" height="50px" width="50px"/>

An Image. You must use the src attribute to define the source of the image and the alt attribute to define
alternative text. You can use the height and width attributes to define the size of the image in pixels.

Week

Version ≥ 5

<input type="week" />

Dependent on browser support, a control will show for entering a week-year number and a week number with no time zone.

Url

Version ≥ 5

<input type="url" name="Homepage">

This is used for input fields that should contain a URL address.
Depending on browser support, the url field can be automatically validated when submitted.
Some smartphones recognize the url type, and adds “.com” to the keyboard to match url input.

DateTime-Local

Version ≥ 5

<input type="datetime-local" />

Dependent on browser support, a date and time picker will pop up on screen for you to choose a date and time.

Month

Version ≥ 5

<input type="month" />

Dependent on browser support, a control will show to pick the month.

Time

Version ≥ 5

<input type="time" />

The time input marks this element as accepting a string representing a time. The format is defined in RFC 3339 and should be a partial-time such as

19:04:39 
08:20:39.04

Currently, all versions of Edge, Chrome, Opera, and Chrome for Android support type=”time”. The newer versions of Android Browser, specifically 4.4 and up support it. Safari for iOS offers partial support, not supporting min, max, and step attributes.

DateTime (Global)

The input element with a type attribute whose value is “datetime” represents a control for setting the element’s value to a string representing a global date and time (with timezone information).

<fieldset>   
<p><label>Meeting time: <input type=datetime name="meeting.start"></label> 
</fieldset>

Permitted attributes:

  • global attributes
  • name
  • disabled
  • form
  • type
  • autocomplete
  • autofocus
  • list
  • min & max
  • step (float)
  • readonly
  • required value

Date

Version ≥ 5

<input type="date" />

A date picker will pop up on screen for you to choose a date. This is not supported in Firefox or Internet Explorer.

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