Text Input
A text input is an interactive element that allows users to enter and edit text within a user interface.
Overview
pie-text-input
is a Web Component built with Lit, providing a simple and accessible text input for web applications.
This component integrates easily with various frontend frameworks and can be customised through a set of properties.
Installation
To install pie-text-input
in your application via npm
or yarn
:
npm i @justeattakeaway/pie-webc
yarn add @justeattakeaway/pie-webc
Props
Prop | Options | Description | Default |
---|---|---|---|
assistiveText | string | Allows assistive text to be displayed below the input element. Must be provided if using a non-default status. | undefined |
autoFocus | true false | If true, the input will be focused on the first render. No more than one element in the document or dialog may have the autofocus attribute. If applied to multiple elements the first one will receive focus. See MDN for more information. | false |
autocomplete | string | Allows the user to enable or disable autocomplete functionality on the input field. See MDN for more information and values. | undefined |
defaultValue | string | During a form reset, the default value will replace the current value. This prop is not normally needed. | undefined |
disabled | true false | When true, the user cannot edit or interact with the control. | false |
inputmode | "none" "text" "tel" "url" "email" "numeric" "decimal" "search" | Provides a hint to browsers as to the type of virtual keyboard configuration to use when editing this element. See MDN for more information. | undefined |
max | number | The maximum value of the input. Only applies when type is number . If the value provided is higher, the input is invalid. | undefined |
maxlength | number | Maximum length (number of characters) of value. Only applies to types: text , url , tel , email , and password . | undefined |
min | number | The minimum value of the input. Only applies when type is number . If the value provided is lower, the input is invalid. | undefined |
minlength | number | Minimum length (number of characters) of value. Only applies to types: text , url , tel , email , and password . | undefined |
name | string | The name of the input (used as a key/value pair with value ). This is required in order to work properly with forms. | undefined |
pattern | string | Specifies a regular expression the form control's value should match. | undefined |
placeholder | string | The placeholder text to display when the input is empty. Only applies to types: text , url , tel , email , and password . | undefined |
readonly | true false | When true, the user cannot edit the control. Not the same as disabled. See MDN for more information. | false |
required | true false | If true, the input is required to have a value before submitting the form. If there is no value, then the component validity state will be invalid. Important note: This will not prevent the form submission. | false |
size | "small" "medium" "large" | The size of the input field. | "medium" |
status | "default" "error" "success" | The status of the input component / assistive text. If you use a non-default status you must also provide assistiveText for accessibility purposes. | "default" |
step | number | An optional amount that value should be incremented or decremented by when using the up and down arrows in the input. Only applies when type is number . | undefined |
type | "text" "number" "password" "url" "email" "tel" | The type of HTML input to render. | "text" |
value | string | The value of the input (used as a key/value pair in HTML forms with name ). | "" |
Slots
Slot | Description |
---|---|
leadingIcon | An icon to display at the start of the input. Do not use at the same time as leadingText . |
leadingText | Short text to display at the start of the input. Wrap the text in a <span> .Do not use at the same time as leadingIcon . |
trailingIcon | An icon to display at the end of the input. Do not use at the same time as trailingText . |
trailingText | Short text to display at the end of the input. Wrap the text in a <span> .Do not use at the same time as trailingIcon . |
Events
Event | Description |
---|---|
change | Fires when the input loses focus after the value has been changed. |
input | Fires when the input value is changed. |
Importing and usage in templates
For HTML and Vue:
// import as module into a js file that will be loaded on the page where the component is used.
import '@justeattakeaway/pie-webc/components/text-input.js';
<pie-text-input
autocomplete="on"
autoFocus
inputmode="text"
maxlength="8"
minlength="4"
name="myinput"
pattern="[a-z]{4,8}"
placeholder="Please enter a value"
readonly
type="text"
value="">
</pie-text-input>
For React Applications:
import { PieTextInput } from '@justeattakeaway/pie-webc/react/text-input.js';
<PieTextInput
autocomplete="on"
autoFocus
inputmode="text"
maxlength={8}
minlength={4}
name="myinput"
pattern="[a-z]{4,8}"
placeholder="Please enter a value"
readonly
type="text"
value="">
</PieTextInput>
// React templates (using Next 13 and SSR)
import { PieTextInput } from '@justeattakeaway/pie-text-input/dist/react';
<PieTextInput
autocomplete="on"
autoFocus
inputmode="text"
maxlength={8}
minlength={4}
name="myinput"
pattern="[a-z]{4,8}"
placeholder="Please enter a value"
readonly
type="text"
value="">
</PieTextInput>
Types
The text input accepts various values for the type
property, allowing control over input behaviour. These are mostly standard HTML input types. For most use cases, the default type of text
will suffice. It is important to note that setting the type to number
does not guarantee the prevention of non-numeric characters being entered. This behaviour, which is consistent with native HTML inputs, allows some non-numeric characters such as e
,+
, -
, and .
.
While different types can influence the virtual keyboard on mobile devices, this can also be controlled using the inputmode
property.
If your application requires specific formatting and needs to control which characters can be entered, or if you need to provide auto-formatting (such as adding spaces to a credit card number), you will need to handle this in your application code. You can listen to the input
and change
events emitted by the text input component to manage these requirements.
Slots usage
You can provide icons or text to sit before or after the input value. When using the leadingText
or trailingText
slots, wrap the text in a <span>
and limit it to 2-3 characters at most. Do not use leadingText
with leadingIcon
or trailingText
with trailingIcon
simultaneously.
For icons in the leadingIcon
or trailingIcon
slots, ensure you use the icon components from our web component icon library. Other icons are not guaranteed to work and will not be supported.
HTML
<pie-text-input
class="form-field"
id="username"
data-test-id="username"
name="username"
type="text">
<icon-user slot="leadingIcon"></icon-user>
<span slot="trailingText">##</span>
</pie-text-input>
Vue
<pie-text-input
:value="username"
@input="username = $event.target.value"
class="form-field"
id="username"
data-test-id="username"
name="username"
type="text">
<icon-user slot="leadingIcon"></icon-user>
<span slot="trailingText">##</span>
</pie-text-input>
React
<PieTextInput
className="form-field"
id="username"
data-test-id="username"
name="username"
value={username}
onInput={handleUsernameInput as any}
type="text">
<IconUser slot="leadingIcon"></IconUser>
<span slot="trailingText">##</span>
</PieTextInput>
Forms usage
It is essential that when using the text input inside of a form, you provide a name
attribute. HTML forms create key/value pairs for input data based on the name
attribute, which is crucial for native form submission.
Validation
The text input component utilizes the constraint validation API to provide a queryable validity state for consumers. This means that the component's validity can be checked via a validity
getter.
Example:
const textInput = document.querySelector('pie-text-input');
console.log(textInput.validity.valid);
This getter can be useful for reducing the amount of validation code in your application. For example, if you want to create a text input that should be at least 2 characters long, at most 5 characters long, and requires a value, you can set the minlength
, maxlength
, and required
properties on the component. You can then check the validity of the input in your application code:
<pie-text-input
id="my-input"
name="my-input"
minlength="2"
maxlength="5"
required></pie-text-input>
const textInput = document.querySelector('pie-text-input');
const isValid = textInput.validity.valid;
// We could use this to drive the status and assistiveText properties on our input (this would likely be inside a submit event handler in a real application)
if (!isValid) {
textInput.status = 'error';
textInput.assistiveText = 'Please enter a value between 2 and 5 characters long';
}
These concepts work just as well inside a Vue or React application. Below is a similar implementation for validating a number input in a React application.
// Very simplified example
const [favouriteNumber, setFavouriteNumber] = useState('');
const [favouriteNumberValidationMessage, setFavouriteNumberValidationMessage] = useState('');
const favouriteNumberRef = useRef<HTMLInputElement>(null);
const handleFavouriteNumberInput = (event: InputEvent) => {
setFavouriteNumber((event.target as HTMLInputElement).value);
};
const handleSubmit = (event: React.FormEvent<HTMLFormElement>) => {
event.preventDefault();
let validationMessage = '';
const inputElement = favouriteNumberRef.current;
if (inputElement) {
if (inputElement.validity.rangeUnderflow) {
validationMessage = 'The favourite number is too low. Please pick a number between -5 and 200.';
} else if (inputElement.validity.rangeOverflow) {
validationMessage = 'The favourite number is too high. Please pick a number between -5 and 200.';
}
}
setFavouriteNumberValidationMessage(validationMessage);
};
// Very simplified example
<form id="testForm" onSubmit={handleSubmit} novalidate>
<PieFormLabel id="favouriteNumberLabel" for="favouriteNumber">
Favourite Number:
</PieFormLabel>
<PieTextInput
aria-labelledby="favouriteNumberLabel"
id="favouriteNumber"
data-test-id="favouriteNumber"
name="favouriteNumber"
min={-5}
max={200}
value={favouriteNumber}
onInput={handleFavouriteNumberInput as any}
type="number"
ref={favouriteNumberRef}
assistiveText={favouriteNumberValidationMessage}
status={favouriteNumberValidationMessage ? 'error' : 'success'}>
<IconNumberSymbol slot="leadingIcon"></IconNumberSymbol>
</PieTextInput>
<PieButton data-test-id="submit-btn" type="submit">Submit</PieButton>
</form>
Displaying error messages
As mentioned earlier, we suggest consumers disable native HTML validation using the novalidate
attribute on the form element. This will prevent the browser from displaying its own validation messages, allowing you to control the validation experience for your users.
To display validation messages, you can use the assistiveText
and status
properties on the text input component. The assistiveText
property is used to display a message below the input, and the status
property is used to set the visual state of the input. The status
property can be set to error
or success
, or you can omit providing a status to display the assistive text in a neutral state.
<pie-text-input
name="firstName"
assistiveText="Please provide a first name"
status="error">
</pie-text-input>
Displaying success messages works in the same way, but with the status
property set to success
.
<pie-text-input
name="firstName"
assistiveText="First name provided"
status="success">
</pie-text-input>
Labelling
Please use the form label component for adding a label to the text input. Similar to native HTML, the label should be a sibling of the input component and reference the input's id
attribute using the for
attribute.
The usage of aria-labelledby
is very important so that screen readers will announce the label when the input is focused. This is especially important for users who rely on screen readers to navigate the web.
<pie-form-label id="first-name-label" for="first-name">First name:</pie-form-label>
<pie-text-input aria-labelledby="first-name-label" id="first-name" name="first-name"></pie-text-input>
If you do not need to use a visual label, you must still provide an aria-label
attribute to the text input. This is important for screen reader users as it will announce the purpose of the input when it is focused, even if a visual label is not used.
<pie-text-input aria-label="First name" name="first-name"></pie-text-input>