jQuery bind to Paste Event, how to get the content of the paste

ε祈祈猫儿з 提交于 2019-11-27 00:54:43
jeff

There is an onpaste event that works in modern day browsers. You can access the pasted data using the getData function on the clipboardData object.

$("#textareaid").bind("paste", function(e){
    // access the clipboard using the api
    var pastedData = e.originalEvent.clipboardData.getData('text');
    alert(pastedData);
} );

Note that bind and unbind are deprecated as of jQuery 3. The preferred call is to on.

All modern day browsers support the Clipboard API.

See also: In Jquery How to handle paste?

Tats_innit

How about this: http://jsfiddle.net/5bNx4/

Please use .on if you are using jq1.7 et al.

Behaviour: When you type anything or paste anything on the 1st textarea the teaxtarea below captures the cahnge.

Rest I hope it helps the cause. :)

Helpful link =>

How do you handle oncut, oncopy, and onpaste in jQuery?

Catch paste input

code

$(document).ready(function() {
    var $editor    = $('#editor');
    var $clipboard = $('<textarea />').insertAfter($editor);

    if(!document.execCommand('StyleWithCSS', false, false)) {
        document.execCommand('UseCSS', false, true);
    }

    $editor.on('paste, keydown', function() {
        var $self = $(this);            
        setTimeout(function(){ 
            var $content = $self.html();             
            $clipboard.val($content);
        },100);
     });
});

I recently needed to accomplish something similar to this. I used the following design to access the paste element and value. jsFiddle demo

$('body').on('paste', 'input, textarea', function (e)
{
    setTimeout(function ()
    {
        //currentTarget added in jQuery 1.3
        alert($(e.currentTarget).val());
        //do stuff
    },0);
});

Another approach: That input event will catch also the paste event.

$('textarea').bind('input', function () {
    setTimeout(function () { 
        console.log('input event handled including paste event');
    }, 0);
});
$(document).ready(function() {
    $("#editor").bind('paste', function (e){
        $(e.target).keyup(getInput);
    });

    function getInput(e){
        var inputText = $(e.target).html(); /*$(e.target).val();*/
        alert(inputText);
        $(e.target).unbind('keyup');
    }
});

You could compare the original value of the field and the changed value of the field and deduct the difference as the pasted value. This catches the pasted text correctly even if there is existing text in the field.

http://jsfiddle.net/6b7sK/

function text_diff(first, second) {
    var start = 0;
    while (start < first.length && first[start] == second[start]) {
        ++start;
    }
    var end = 0;
    while (first.length - end > start && first[first.length - end - 1] == second[second.length - end - 1]) {
        ++end;
    }
    end = second.length - end;
    return second.substr(start, end - start);
}
$('textarea').bind('paste', function () {
    var self = $(this);
    var orig = self.val();
    setTimeout(function () {
        var pasted = text_diff(orig, $(self).val());
        console.log(pasted);
    });
});
Chandler Zwolle

It would appear as though this event has some clipboardData property attached to it (it may be nested within the originalEvent property). The clipboardData contains an array of items and each one of those items has a getAsString() function that you can call. This returns the string representation of what is in the item.

Those items also have a getAsFile() function, as well as some others which are browser specific (e.g. in webkit browsers, there is a webkitGetAsEntry() function).

For my purposes, I needed the string value of what is being pasted. So, I did something similar to this:

$(element).bind("paste", function (e) {
    e.originalEvent.clipboardData.items[0].getAsString(function (pStringRepresentation) {
        debugger; 
        // pStringRepresentation now contains the string representation of what was pasted.
        // This does not include HTML or any markup. Essentially jQuery's $(element).text()
        // function result.
    });
});

You'll want to perform an iteration through the items, keeping a string concatenation result.

The fact that there is an array of items makes me think more work will need to be done, analyzing each item. You'll also want to do some null/value checks.

This work on all browser to get pasted value. And also to creating common method for all text box.

$("#textareaid").bind("paste", function(e){       
    var pastedData = e.target.value;
    alert(pastedData);
} )

On modern browsers it's easy: just use the input event along with the inputType attribute:

$(document).on('input', 'input, textarea', function(e){
  if (e.originalEvent.inputType == 'insertFromPaste') {
    alert($(this).val());
  }
});

https://codepen.io/anon/pen/jJOWxg

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