Count textarea characters

坚强是说给别人听的谎言 提交于 2019-11-27 01:00:35
$("#textarea").keyup(function(){
  $("#count").text($(this).val().length);
});

The above will do what you want. If you want to do a count down then change it to this:

$("#textarea").keyup(function(){
  $("#count").text("Characters left: " + (500 - $(this).val().length));
});

Alternatively, you can accomplish the same thing without jQuery using the following code. (Thanks @Niet)

document.getElementById('textarea').onkeyup = function () {
  document.getElementById('count').innerHTML = "Characters left: " + (500 - this.value.length);
};

⚠️ The accepted solution is outdated.

Here are two scenarios where the keyup event will not get fired:

  1. The user drags text into the textarea.
  2. The user copy-paste text in the textarea with a right click (contextual menu).

Use the HTML5 input event instead for a more robust solution:

<textarea maxlength='140'></textarea>

JavaScript (demo):

const textarea = document.querySelector("textarea");

textarea.addEventListener("input", event => {
    const target = event.currentTarget;
    const maxLength = target.getAttribute("maxlength");
    const currentLength = target.value.length;

    if (currentLength >= maxLength) {
        return console.log("You have reached the maximum number of characters.");
    }

    console.log(`${maxLength - currentLength} chars left`);
});

And if you absolutely want to use jQuery:

$('textarea').on("input", function(){
    var maxlength = $(this).attr("maxlength");
    var currentLength = $(this).val().length;

    if( currentLength >= maxlength ){
        console.log("You have reached the maximum number of characters.");
    }else{
        console.log(maxlength - currentLength + " chars left");
    }
});
textarea.addEventListener("keypress", textareaLengthCheck(textarea), false);

You are calling textareaLengthCheck and then assigning its return value to the event listener. This is why it doesn't update or do anything after loading. Try this:

textarea.addEventListener("keypress",textareaLengthCheck,false);

Aside from that:

var length = textarea.length;

textarea is the actual textarea, not the value. Try this instead:

var length = textarea.value.length;

Combined with the previous suggestion, your function should be:

function textareaLengthCheck() {
    var length = this.value.length;
    // rest of code
};

Here is simple code. Hope it is working

$(document).ready(function() {
var text_max = 99;
$('#textarea_feedback').html(text_max + ' characters remaining');

$('#textarea').keyup(function() {
    var text_length = $('#textarea').val().length;
    var text_remaining = text_max - text_length;

    $('#textarea_feedback').html(text_remaining + ' characters remaining');
});

});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<textarea id="textarea" rows="8" cols="30" maxlength="99" ></textarea>
<div id="textarea_feedback"></div>

This code gets the maximum value from the maxlength attribute of the textarea and decreases the value as the user types.

<DEMO>

var el_t = document.getElementById('textarea');
var length = el_t.getAttribute("maxlength");
var el_c = document.getElementById('count');
el_c.innerHTML = length;
el_t.onkeyup = function () {
  document.getElementById('count').innerHTML = (length - this.value.length);
};
<textarea id="textarea" name="text"
 maxlength="500"></textarea>
<span id="count"></span>

For those wanting a simple solution without jQuery, here's a way.

textarea and message container to put in your form:

<textarea onKeyUp="count_it()" id="text" name="text"></textarea>
Length <span id="counter"></span>

JavaScript:

<script>
function count_it() {
    document.getElementById('counter').innerHTML = document.getElementById('text').value.length;
}
count_it();
</script>

The script counts the characters initially and then for every keystroke and puts the number in the counter span.

Martin

var maxchar = 10;
$('#message').after('<span id="count" class="counter"></span>');
$('#count').html(maxchar+' of '+maxchar);
$('#message').attr('maxlength', maxchar);
$('#message').parent().addClass('wrap-text');
$('#message').on("keydown", function(e){
	var len =  $('#message').val().length;
	if (len >= maxchar && e.keyCode != 8)
		   e.preventDefault();
	else if(len <= maxchar && e.keyCode == 8){
		if(len <= maxchar && len != 0)
	   		$('#count').html(maxchar+' of '+(maxchar - len +1));
	   	else if(len == 0)
	   		$('#count').html(maxchar+' of '+(maxchar - len));
	}else
		 $('#count').html(maxchar+' of '+(maxchar - len-1)); 
})
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<textarea id="message" name="text"></textarea>

I found that the accepted answer didn't exactly work with textareas for reasons noted in Chrome counts characters wrong in textarea with maxlength attribute because of newline and carriage return characters, which is important if you need to know how much space would be taken up when storing the information in a database. Also, the use of keyup is depreciated because of drag-and-drop and pasting text from the clipboard, which is why I used the input and propertychange events. The following takes newline characters into account and accurately calculates the length of a textarea.

$(function() {
  $("#myTextArea").on("input propertychange", function(event) {
    var curlen = $(this).val().replace(/\r(?!\n)|\n(?!\r)/g, "\r\n").length;

    $("#counter").html(curlen);
  });
});

$("#counter").text($("#myTextArea").val().replace(/\r(?!\n)|\n(?!\r)/g, "\r\n").length);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<textarea id="myTextArea"></textarea><br>
Size: <span id="counter" />
    $(document).ready(function(){ 
    $('#characterLeft').text('140 characters left');
    $('#message').keydown(function () {
        var max = 140;
        var len = $(this).val().length;
        if (len >= max) {
            $('#characterLeft').text('You have reached the limit');
            $('#characterLeft').addClass('red');
            $('#btnSubmit').addClass('disabled');            
        } 
        else {
            var ch = max - len;
            $('#characterLeft').text(ch + ' characters left');
            $('#btnSubmit').removeClass('disabled');
            $('#characterLeft').removeClass('red');            
        }
    });    
});

They say IE has issues with the input event but other than that, the solution is rather straightforward.

ta = document.querySelector("textarea");
count = document.querySelector("label");

ta.addEventListener("input", function (e) {
  count.innerHTML = this.value.length;
});
<textarea id="my-textarea" rows="4" cols="50" maxlength="10">
</textarea>
<label for="my-textarea"></label>

This solution will respond to keyboard and mouse events, and apply to initial text.

    $(document).ready(function () {
        $('textarea').bind('input propertychange', function () {
            atualizaTextoContador($(this));
        });

        $('textarea').each(function () {
            atualizaTextoContador($(this));
        });
    });

    function atualizaTextoContador(textarea) {
        var spanContador = textarea.next('span.contador');
        var maxlength = textarea.attr('maxlength');
        if (!spanContador || !maxlength)
            return;
        var numCaracteres = textarea.val().length;
        spanContador.html(numCaracteres + ' / ' + maxlength);
    }
    span.contador {
        display: block;
        margin-top: -20px;
    }
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<textarea maxlength="100" rows="4">initial text</textarea>
<span class="contador"></span>
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