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- title: You can't capture the nuance of my form fields
- url: https://drewdevault.com/2021/06/27/You-cant-capture-the-nuance.html
- hash_url: 1a6493b2d0049ae88f2b331a990a85b8
-
- <p>Check out this text box:</p>
- <style>
- textarea {
- width: 100%;
- }
- </style>
- <p><textarea rows="10" autocomplete="off" autocorrect="off" autocapitalize="off" spellcheck="false">Consectetur qui consequatur voluptatibus voluptatem sit sint perspiciatis. Eos aspernatur ad laboriosam quam numquam quo. Quia reiciendis illo quo praesentium. Dolor porro et et sit dolorem quisquam totam quae.
- Ea molestias a aspernatur dignissimos suscipit incidunt. Voluptates in vel qui quaerat. Asperiores vel sit rerum est ipsam. Odio aut aut voluptate qui voluptatem.
- Quia consequatur provident fugiat voluptatibus consequatur. Est sunt aspernatur velit. Officiis a dolorum accusantium. Sint est ut inventore.</textarea></p>
- <p>Here are some of the nuances of using this text box on my operating system
- (Linux) and web browser (Firefox):</p>
- <ul>
- <li>Double clicking selects a word, and triple-clicking selects the whole line. If
- I double- or triple-click-and-hold, I can drag the mouse to expand the
- selection word-wise or line-wise, not just character-wise. This works with the
- paragraphs of text in the body of this blog post, too.</li>
- <li>Holding control and pressing right will move move word-wise through the file.
- It always moves to the start or end of the next or prior word, so pressing
- “control+left, control+left, control+right” will end up in a different
- position than “control+left” alone. Adding “shift” to any of these will mutate
- the text selection.</li>
- <li>Clicking any of the whitespace after the end of the text will put the cursor
- after the last character, even if you click to the left of the last character.
- This makes it easy to start appending text to the end.</li>
- <li>Clicking and dragging from any point, I can drag the mouse straight upward,
- exceeding the bounds of the text box or even the entire web browser, to select
- all text from that point to the start of the text box. (Thanks minus for
- mentioning this one)</li>
- <li>Selecting text and middle clicking anywhere will paste the text at the clicked
- location. This uses a separate, distinct clipboard from the one accessed with
- ctrl+c/ctrl+v. I can also use shift+insert to paste text from this secondary
- clipboard (this is called the “primary selection”).</li>
- </ul>
- <p>I rely on all of these nuances when I use form controls in my everyday life.
- This is just for English, by the way. I often type in Japanese, which has an
- entirely alien set of nuances. Here’s what that looks like on Android (mobile is
- another beast entirely, too!):</p>
- <video src="https://l.sr.ht/u274.webm" muted autoplay loop controls>
- If you're seeing this, your browser doesn't support HTML5 video, or webm, idk.
- </video>
- <p>Here’s another control:</p>
- <select>
- <option>Alabama</option>
- <option>Alaska</option>
- <option>Arizona</option>
- <option>Arkansas</option>
- <option>California</option>
- <option>Colorado</option>
- <option>Connecticut</option>
- <option>Delaware</option>
- <option>Florida</option>
- <option>Georgia</option>
- <option>Hawaii</option>
- <option>Idaho</option>
- <option>Illinois</option>
- <option>Indiana</option>
- <option>Iowa</option>
- <option>Kansas</option>
- <option>Kentucky</option>
- <option>Louisiana</option>
- <option>Maine</option>
- <option>Maryland</option>
- <option>Massachusetts</option>
- <option>Michigan</option>
- <option>Minnesota</option>
- <option>Mississippi</option>
- <option>Missouri</option>
- <option>Montana</option>
- <option>Nebraska</option>
- <option>Nevada</option>
- <option>New Hampshire</option>
- <option>New Jersey</option>
- <option>New Mexico</option>
- <option>New York</option>
- <option>North Carolina</option>
- <option>North Dakota</option>
- <option>Ohio</option>
- <option>Oklahoma</option>
- <option>Oregon</option>
- <option>Pennsylvania</option>
- <option>Rhode Island</option>
- <option>South Carolina</option>
- <option>South Dakota</option>
- <option>Tennessee</option>
- <option>Texas</option>
- <option>Utah</option>
- <option>Vermont</option>
- <option>Virginia</option>
- <option>Washington</option>
- <option>West Virginia</option>
- <option>Wisconsin</option>
- <option>Wyoming</option>
- </select>
- <p>There’s an invisible edit buffer, so I can type “Pennsylvania” (or just P) to
- select what I want. I can type “New” and then press down to select “New Jersey”.
- If I make a mistake and I’ve kept track of what I’ve typed in my head, I can use
- backspace to make a correction, and it just works. I have lived in both of these
- places, and worked both of these keystrokes into my muscle memory. Filling out a
- form with my address on it and using an input box like this to select my state
- of residence takes me less than a second.</p>
- <p>You cannot capture all of this nuance in a home-grown form control, or even
- anything close to it, but many JavaScript programmers do it anyway. Whenever I
- encounter a custom form control, the time required to complete the form
- increases from under a second to as much as a minute.</p>
- <p>For myself, this is just very annoying. Imagine the same situation if you were
- blind. The standard form inputs work everywhere, and are designed with
- accessibility in mind, so you’re used to them and can easily fill in forms which
- use the standard browser controls. But, when you hit a JavaScript-powered
- organic cage-free non-GMO text box, you’re screwed.</p>
- <p>There are hundreds of little nuances that users learn to use their computers
- efficiently. The exact features a user relies on will vary between operating
- systems, browsers, hardware, natural languages, physical ability, and personal
- preferences and experience. There are dozens of tiny workflows that people
- depend on every day that have never even occurred to you.</p>
- <p>Making a custom form control with JavaScript is going to make life worse for a
- lot of people. Just don’t do it. The browser’s built-in controls are quite
- sufficient.</p>
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