Baseline Widely available
The selectionEnd
property of the HTMLInputElement
interface is a number that represents the end index of the selected text. When there is no selection, this returns the offset of the character immediately following the current text input cursor position.
Note: According to the WHATWG forms spec selectionEnd
property applies only to inputs of types text, search, URL, tel, and password. In modern browsers, throws an exception while setting selectionEnd
property on the rest of input types. Additionally, this property returns null
while accessing selectionEnd
property on non-text input elements.
If selectionEnd
is less than selectionStart
, then both are treated as the value of selectionEnd
.
A non-negative number.
Examples HTML<!-- using selectionEnd on non text input element -->
<label for="color">selectionStart property on type=color</label>
<input id="color" type="color" />
<!-- using selectionEnd on text input element -->
<fieldset>
<legend>selectionEnd property on type=text</legend>
<label for="pin">Input PIN</label>
<input type="text" id="pin" value="impossible PIN: 102-12-145" />
<button id="pin-btn" type="button">PIN correction</button>
</fieldset>
JavaScript
const colorEnd = document.getElementById("color");
const text = document.querySelector("#pin");
const pinBtn = document.querySelector("#pin-btn");
const validPinChecker = /^\d{3}-\d{2}-\d{3}/g;
const selectionEnd = text.value.length;
const selectedText = text.value.substring(text.selectionStart, selectionEnd);
pinBtn.addEventListener("click", () => {
const correctedText = selectedText.replace(validPinChecker, "");
text.value = correctedText;
});
// open browser console to verify output
console.log(colorEnd.selectionEnd); // Output : null
Result Specifications Browser compatibility See also
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4