An unwanted interaction occurs between the currently used [email protected] and [email protected]. When selecting text inside a datepicker using a masked input, after letting go of the mouse, the selection would be undone.
This is caused by the datepicker re-rendering (cloning) the custom input on mouseUp (basically any event), the cloned element not having a previous state, and therefore resetting the selection to the cursor position.
The resetting of the selection is simply commented out in this commit, therefore fixing the issue in our specific case.
Latest tested versions:
- react-datepicker: 2.7.0
- react-input-mask: 2.0.5
Input masking component for React. Made with attention to UX. Compatible with IE8+.
npm install react-input-mask --save
Also you can use it without a module bundler
<!-- Load React first -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react/dist/react.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react-dom/dist/react-dom.min.js"></script>
<!-- Will be exported to window.ReactInputMask -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/react-input-mask/dist/react-input-mask.min.js"></script>
Mask string. Default format characters are:
9
: 0-9
a
: A-Z, a-z
*
: A-Z, a-z, 0-9
Any character can be escaped with a backslash. It will appear as a double backslash in JS strings. For example, a German phone mask with unremoveable prefix +49 will look like mask="+4\9 99 999 99"
or mask={'+4\\9 99 999 99'}
Character to cover unfilled parts of the mask. Default character is "_". If set to null or empty string, unfilled parts will be empty as in ordinary input.
Defines format characters with characters as a keys and corresponding RegExp strings as a values. Default ones:
{
'9': '[0-9]',
'a': '[A-Za-z]',
'*': '[A-Za-z0-9]'
}
Show mask when input is empty and has no focus.
Use inputRef
instead of ref
if you need input node to manage focus, selection, etc.
The following props are considered experimental because they are more prone to issues and are likely to be changed in the future. Use with caution.
In case you need to implement more complex masking behavior, you can provide beforeMaskedValueChange
function to change masked value and cursor position before it will be applied to the input. beforeMaskedValueChange
receives following arguments:
- newState (object): New input state. Contains
value
andselection
fields.selection
is null on input blur or when function is called before input mount. Example:{ value: '12/1_/____', selection: { start: 4, end: 4 } }
- oldState (object): Input state before change. Contains
value
andselection
fields.selection
is null on input focus or when function is called before input mount. - userInput (string): Raw entered or pasted string.
null
if user didn't enter anything (e.g. triggered by deletion or rerender due to props change). - maskOptions (object): Mask options. Example:
{
mask: '99/99/9999',
maskChar: '_',
alwaysShowMask: false,
formatChars: {
'9': '[0-9]',
'a': '[A-Za-z]',
'*': '[A-Za-z0-9]'
},
permanents: [2, 5] // permanents is an array of indexes of the non-editable characters in the mask
}
beforeMaskedValueChange
must return an object with following fields:
- value (string): New value.
- selection (object): New selection. If
selection
innewState
argument is null, it must be null too.
Please note that beforeMaskedValueChange
executes more often than onChange
and must be pure.
NOTE: To make this feature more reliable, please tell about your use case in this issue
To use another component instead of regular <input />
pass render function as a children. Function receives props
argument which contains props that aren't used by react-input-mask's internals. I.e. it passes down every prop except the following ones: onChange
, onPaste
, onMouseDown
, onFocus
, onBlur
, value
, disabled
, readOnly
. These properties, if used, should always be passed directly to react-input-mask instead of children and shouldn't be altered in chldren's function.
import React from 'react';
import InputMask from 'react-input-mask';
import MaterialInput from '@material-ui/core/Input';
// Will work fine
const Input = (props) => (
<InputMask mask="99/99/9999" value={props.value} onChange={props.onChange}>
{(inputProps) => <MaterialInput {...inputProps} type="tel" disableUnderline />}
</InputMask>
);
// Will throw an error because InputMask's and children's onChange aren't the same
const InvalidInput = (props) => (
<InputMask mask="99/99/9999" value={props.value}>
{(inputProps) => <MaterialInput {...inputProps} type="tel" disableUnderline onChange={props.onChange} />}
</InputMask>
);
import React from 'react';
import InputMask from 'react-input-mask';
class PhoneInput extends React.Component {
render() {
return <InputMask {...this.props} mask="+4\9 99 999 99" maskChar=" " />;
}
}
Mask for ZIP Code. Uses beforeMaskedValueChange to omit trailing minus if it wasn't entered by user:
import React from 'react';
import InputMask from 'react-input-mask';
class Input extends React.Component {
state = {
value: ''
}
onChange = (event) => {
this.setState({
value: event.target.value
});
}
beforeMaskedValueChange = (newState, oldState, userInput) => {
var { value } = newState;
var selection = newState.selection;
var cursorPosition = selection ? selection.start : null;
// keep minus if entered by user
if (value.endsWith('-') && userInput !== '-' && !this.state.value.endsWith('-')) {
if (cursorPosition === value.length) {
cursorPosition--;
selection = { start: cursorPosition, end: cursorPosition };
}
value = value.slice(0, -1);
}
return {
value,
selection
};
}
render() {
return <InputMask mask="99999-9999" maskChar={null} value={this.state.value} onChange={this.onChange} beforeMaskedValueChange={this.beforeMaskedValueChange} />;
}
}
Browser's autofill requires either empty value in input or value which exactly matches beginning of the autofilled value. I.e. autofilled value "+1 (555) 123-4567" will work with "+1" or "+1 (5", but won't work with "+1 (___) ___-____" or "1 (555)". There are several possible solutions:
- Set
maskChar
to null and trim space after "+1" withbeforeMaskedValueChange
if no more digits are entered. - Apply mask only if value is not empty. In general, this is the most reliable solution because we can't be sure about formatting in autofilled value.
- Use less formatting in the mask.
Please note that it might lead to worse user experience (should I enter +1 if input is empty?). You should choose what's more important to your users — smooth typing experience or autofill. Phone and ZIP code inputs are very likely to be autofilled and it's a good idea to care about it, while security confirmation code in two-factor authorization shouldn't care about autofill at all.
Thanks to BrowserStack for the help with testing on real devices