--- title: TextField order: 9 layout: page --- [[components.textfield]] = [classname]#TextField# ifdef::web[] [.sampler] image:{live-demo-image}[alt="Live Demo", link="http://demo.vaadin.com/sampler/#ui/data-input/text-input/text-field"] endif::web[] ((("[classname]#TextField#", id="term.components.textfield", range="startofrange"))) [classname]#TextField# is one of the most commonly used user interface components. It is a [classname]#Field# component that allows entering textual values with keyboard. The following example creates a simple text field: [source, java] ---- // Create a text field TextField tf = new TextField("A Field"); // Put some initial content in it tf.setValue("Stuff in the field"); ---- See the http://demo.vaadin.com/book-examples-vaadin7/book#component.textfield.basic[on-line example, window="_blank"]. The result is shown in <>. [[figure.components.textfield.basic]] .[classname]#TextField# Example image::img/textfield-example.png[width=40%, scaledwidth=50%] Value changes are handled with a [classname]#Property.ValueChangeListener#, as in most other fields. The value can be acquired with [methodname]#getValue()# directly from the text field, as is done in the example below, or from the property reference of the event. [source, java] ---- // Handle changes in the value tf.addValueChangeListener(new Property.ValueChangeListener() { public void valueChange(ValueChangeEvent event) { // Assuming that the value type is a String String value = (String) event.getProperty().getValue(); // Do something with the value Notification.show("Value is: " + value); } }); // Fire value changes immediately when the field loses focus tf.setImmediate(true); ---- See the http://demo.vaadin.com/book-examples-vaadin7/book#component.textfield.inputhandling[on-line example, window="_blank"]. As with other event listeners, you can use lambda expression with one parameter to handle the events in Java 8. Much of the API of [classname]#TextField# is defined in [classname]#AbstractTextField#, which allows different kinds of text input fields, such as rich text editors, which do not share all the features of the single-line text fields. [[figure.components.textfield.api]] .Text Field Class Relationships image::img/textfield-diagram-hi.png[width=40%, scaledwidth=70%] [[components.textfield.databinding]] == Data Binding [classname]#TextField# edits [classname]#String# values, but you can bind it to any property type that has a proper converter, as described in <>. [source, java] ---- // Have an initial data model. As Double is unmodificable and // doesn't support assignment from String, the object is // reconstructed in the wrapper when the value is changed. Double trouble = 42.0; // Wrap it in a property data source final ObjectProperty property = new ObjectProperty(trouble); // Create a text field bound to it // (StringToDoubleConverter is used automatically) TextField tf = new TextField("The Answer", property); tf.setImmediate(true); // Show that the value is really written back to the // data source when edited by user. Label feedback = new Label(property); feedback.setCaption("The Value"); ---- See the http://demo.vaadin.com/book-examples-vaadin7/book#component.textfield.databinding[on-line example, window="_blank"]. When you put a [classname]#Table# in editable mode or create fields with a [classname]#FieldGroup#, the [classname]#DefaultFieldFactory# creates a [classname]#TextField# for almost every property type by default. You often need to make a custom factory to customize the creation and to set the field tooltip, validation, formatting, and so on. See <> for more details on data binding, field factories for [classname]#Table# in <>, and <> regarding forms. [[components.textfield.length]] == String Length The [methodname]#setMaxLength()# method sets the maximum length of the input string so that the browser prevents the user from entering a longer one. As a security feature, the input value is automatically truncated on the server-side, as the maximum length setting could be bypassed on the client-side. The maximum length property is defined at [classname]#AbstractTextField# level. Notice that the maximum length setting does not affect the width of the field. You can set the width with [methodname]#setWidth()#, as with other components. Using __em__ widths is recommended to better approximate the proper width in relation to the size of the used font, but the __em__ width is not exactly the width of a letter and varies by browser and operating system. There is no standard way in HTML for setting the width exactly to a number of letters (in a monospaced font). [[components.textfield.nullvalues]] == Handling Null Values ((("Null representation", id="term.components.textfield.nullvalues", range="startofrange"))) ((("[methodname]#setNullRepresentation()#"))) As with any field, the value of a [classname]#TextField# can be set as [parameter]#null#. This occurs most commonly when you create a new field without setting a value for it or bind the field value to a data source that allows null values. In such case, you might want to show a special value that stands for the null value. You can set the null representation with the [methodname]#setNullRepresentation()# method. Most typically, you use an empty string for the null representation, unless you want to differentiate from a string that is explicitly empty. The default null representation is "[literal]#null#", which essentially warns that you may have forgotten to initialize your data objects properly. ((("[methodname]#setNullSettingAllowed()#"))) The [methodname]#setNullSettingAllowed()# controls whether the user can actually input a null value by using the null value representation. If the setting is [literal]#++false++#, which is the default, inputting the null value representation string sets the value as the literal value of the string, not null. This default assumption is a safeguard for data sources that may not allow null values. [source, java] ---- // Have a property with null value ObjectProperty dataModel = new ObjectProperty(new Double(0.0)); dataModel.setValue(null); // Have to set it null here // Create a text field bound to the null data TextField tf = new TextField("Field Energy (J)", dataModel); tf.setNullRepresentation("-- null-point --"); // Allow user to input the null value by its representation tf.setNullSettingAllowed(true); ---- See the http://demo.vaadin.com/book-examples-vaadin7/book#component.textfield.nullvaluerepresentation[on-line example, window="_blank"]. The [classname]#Label#, which is bound to the value of the [classname]#TextField#, displays a null value as empty. The resulting user interface is shown in <>. [[figure.components.textfield.nullvalues]] .Null Value Representation image::img/textfield-nullrepresentation.png[width=35%, scaledwidth=50%] (((range="endofrange", startref="term.components.textfield.nullvalues"))) [[components.textfield.textchangeevents]] == Text Change Events ((("[classname]#Text change events#", id="term.components.textfield.textchangeevents", range="startofrange"))) Often you want to receive a change event immediately when the text field value changes. The __immediate__ mode is not literally immediate, as the changes are transmitted only after the field loses focus. In the other extreme, using keyboard events for every keypress would make typing unbearably slow and also processing the keypresses is too complicated for most purposes. __Text change events__ are transmitted asynchronously soon after typing and do not block typing while an event is being processed. ((([classname]#TextChangeListener#))) Text change events are received with a [classname]#TextChangeListener#, as is done in the following example that demonstrates how to create a text length counter: [source, java] ---- // Text field with maximum length final TextField tf = new TextField("My Eventful Field"); tf.setValue("Initial content"); tf.setMaxLength(20); // Counter for input length final Label counter = new Label(); counter.setValue(tf.getValue().length() + " of " + tf.getMaxLength()); // Display the current length interactively in the counter tf.addTextChangeListener(new TextChangeListener() { public void textChange(TextChangeEvent event) { int len = event.getText().length(); counter.setValue(len + " of " + tf.getMaxLength()); } }); // The lazy mode is actually the default tf.setTextChangeEventMode(TextChangeEventMode.LAZY); ---- See the http://demo.vaadin.com/book-examples-vaadin7/book#component.textfield.textchangeevents.counter[on-line example, window="_blank"]. The result is shown in <>. [[figure.components.textfield.textchangeevents]] .Text Change Events image::img/textfield-textchangeevents.png[width=35%, scaledwidth=50%] The __text change event mode__ defines how quickly the changes are transmitted to the server and cause a server-side event. Lazier change events allow sending larger changes in one event if the user is typing fast, thereby reducing server requests. ((([classname]#TextChangeEventMode#))) You can set the text change event mode of a [classname]#TextField# with [methodname]#setTextChangeEventMode()#. The allowed modes are defined in [classname]#TextChangeEventMode# enum and are as follows: [parameter]#TextChangeEventMode.LAZY#(default):: An event is triggered when there is a pause in editing the text. The length of the pause can be modified with [methodname]#setInputEventTimeout()#. As with the [parameter]#TIMEOUT# mode, a text change event is forced before a possible [classname]#ValueChangeEvent#, even if the user did not keep a pause while entering the text. + This is the default mode. [parameter]#TextChangeEventMode.TIMEOUT#:: A text change in the user interface causes the event to be communicated to the application after a timeout period. If more changes are made during this period, the event sent to the server-side includes the changes made up to the last change. The length of the timeout can be set with [methodname]#setInputEventTimeout()#. + If a [classname]#ValueChangeEvent# would occur before the timeout period, a [classname]#TextChangeEvent# is triggered before it, on the condition that the text content has changed since the previous [classname]#TextChangeEvent#. [parameter]#TextChangeEventMode.EAGER#:: An event is triggered immediately for every change in the text content, typically caused by a key press. The requests are separate and are processed sequentially one after another. Change events are nevertheless communicated asynchronously to the server, so further input can be typed while event requests are being processed. (((range="endofrange", startref="term.components.textfield.textchangeevents"))) [[components.textfield.css]] == CSS Style Rules [source, css] ---- .v-textfield { } ---- The HTML structure of [classname]#TextField# is extremely simple, consisting only of an element with the [literal]#++v-textfield++# style. For example, the following custom style uses dashed border: [source, css] ---- .v-textfield-dashing { border: thin dashed; background: white; /* Has shading image by default */ } ---- See the http://demo.vaadin.com/book-examples-vaadin7/book#component.textfield.css[on-line example, window="_blank"]. The result is shown in <>. [[figure.components.textfield.css]] .Styling TextField with CSS image::img/textfield-css.png[] The style name for [classname]#TextField# is also used in several components that contain a text input field, even if the text input is not an actual [classname]#TextField#. This ensures that the style of different text input boxes is similar. (((range="endofrange", startref="term.components.textfield")))