jquery.placeholder
v2.0.7
Published
A jQuery plugin that enables HTML5 placeholder behavior for browsers that aren’t trying hard enough yet
Maintainers
Readme
HTML5 Placeholder jQuery Plugin
Demo & Examples
http://mathiasbynens.be/demo/placeholder
Example Usage
HTML
<input type="text" name="name" placeholder="e.g. John Doe">
<input type="email" name="email" placeholder="e.g. [email protected]">
<input type="url" name="url" placeholder="e.g. http://mathiasbynens.be/">
<input type="tel" name="tel" placeholder="e.g. +32 472 77 69 88">
<input type="password" name="password" placeholder="e.g. h4x0rpr00fz">
<input type="search" name="search" placeholder="Search this site…">
<textarea name="message" placeholder="Your message goes here"></textarea>jQuery
Use the plugin as follows:
$('input, textarea').placeholder();You’ll still be able to use jQuery#val() to get and set the input values. If the element is currently showing a placeholder, .val() will return an empty string instead of the placeholder text, just like it does in browsers with a native @placeholder implementation. Calling .val('') to set an element’s value to the empty string will result in the placeholder text (re)appearing.
CSS
The plugin automatically adds class="placeholder" to the elements who are currently showing their placeholder text. You can use this to style placeholder text differently:
input, textarea { color: #000; }
.placeholder { color: #aaa; }I’d suggest sticking to the #aaa color for placeholder text, as it’s the default in most browsers that support @placeholder. If you really want to, though, you can style the placeholder text in some of the browsers that natively support it.
Installation
You can install jquery-placeholder by using Bower.
bower install jquery-placeholderNotes
Requires jQuery 1.6+. For an older version of this plugin that works under jQuery 1.4.2+, see v1.8.7.
Works in all A-grade browsers, including IE6.
Automatically checks if the browser natively supports the HTML5
placeholderattribute forinputandtextareaelements. If this is the case, the plugin won’t do anything. If@placeholderis only supported forinputelements, the plugin will leave those alone and apply totextareas exclusively. (This is the case for Safari 4, Opera 11.00, and possibly other browsers.)Caches the results of its two feature tests in
jQuery.fn.placeholder.inputandjQuery.fn.placeholder.textarea. For example, if@placeholderis natively supported forinputelements,jQuery.fn.placeholder.inputwill betrue. After loading the plugin, you can re-use these properties in your own code.Makes sure it never causes duplicate IDs in your DOM, even in browsers that need an extra
inputelement to fake@placeholderfor password inputs. This means you can safely do stuff like:<label for="bar">Example label</label> <input type="password" placeholder="foo" id="bar">And the
<label>will always point to the<input>element you’d expect. Also, all CSS styles based on the ID will just work™.
License
This plugin is available under the MIT license.
Thanks to…
- Paul Irish for his inspiring snippet in jQuery 1.4 Hawtness #1
- everyone from #jquery for the tips, ideas and patches
- temp01 for his major contributions
- anyone who contributed a patch or made a helpful suggestion
– Mathias
