8

I found out that when pasting text (i.e. Hello) by using the mouse, the following function will throw an empty popup:

$('input:text').onpaste = function()
{
    alert($('input:text').val());
});

The thing is, when the onpaste event is being fired, the text is not yet actually pasted to the input field (at least that's my guess). So changing the function to:

$('input:text').onpaste = function()
{
    setTimeout(function()
    {
        alert($('input:text').val()
    }, 100);
}

gives a correct result by showing a popup with the text Hello when pasted to the input field.

Now my question: is there is any possibility to catch the pasted text without using the setTimeout() function? This workaround seems quite dirty so I'd love to not have to use it.

kkthxbai xon1c

xon1c
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4 Answers4

12

you can use the oninput event instead, modern browsers support this method

http://jsfiddle.net/pxfunc/KDLjf/

$('input').bind('input', function(e) {
    console.log($(this).val());
}); 
MikeM
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1
$('input:text').bind('paste', function() { 
    alert($(this).val());
});
Noxt
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0

I don't think the bellow code works on IE8 since the input value is not changed when alert() executed.

 $('input').bind('input paste', function(e) {
     alert($(this).val());
 }); 

on Firefox and Chrome, it works fine.

YuC
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0

try this to get the data being pasted:

$("input:text").bind('paste', function(e) {
     var text = e.event;
     alert(text);
});

The timeout is needed to get the dom updated so the value is actually in the input field. you could also use the change event to check if the input box is updated http://api.jquery.com/change

GeertvdC
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