- From: <bugzilla@jessica.w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 09 Mar 2011 14:43:27 +0000
- To: public-html-bugzilla@w3.org
http://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/show_bug.cgi?id=12271 Summary: <input list=""> needs an event triggered on selection of suggestion Product: HTML WG Version: unspecified Platform: PC OS/Version: Linux Status: NEW Severity: normal Priority: P2 Component: HTML5 spec (editor: Ian Hickson) AssignedTo: ian@hixie.ch ReportedBy: ben.bucksch@beonex.com QAContact: public-html-bugzilla@w3.org CC: mike@w3.org, public-html-wg-issue-tracking@w3.org, public-html@w3.org 4.10.7.2 Common input element attributes 4.10.7.2.3 The list attribute Current spec text: > When the user selects a suggestion, the input element's value must > be set to the selected suggestion's value, as if the user had written > that value himself. While this implements an autocomplete widget, and allows labels, the action should be configurable by the page, using an event handler, e.g. onListSelect. Just specifying that the value must be set/added to the textfield, as you currently do (quoted above), fails many important usecases: 1. Your own example of email address autocomplete, under section "The multiple attribute". Here, you conveniently let only the email address be added to the textfield, but that's neither user-friendly nor what current email clients like Thunderbird do. Instead, they add "Arthur Dosh <art@example.net>" instead of "art@example.net", but that would not work in your example with the labels. 2. While writing something akin to Firefox' awesomebar, I need something that triggers different actions based on what's selected: We either load the selected URL, or we start a search with the proposed search term (whereby the search term is the value), or we start a search with a given search engine (we have several search engines, and suggest providers, and the search needs to go to the engine that provided the suggestion). This can only be done with custom actions. I'm sure there are tons of other cases where the action must be something else other than just setting/adding the text to the textfield. As said, this could be solved with simply adding an event that's fired when the user selects an item from the list. The default handler could still be to set/add the value as text to the textfield. If the element does not have a multiple attribute specified or if the multiple attribute does not apply -- Configure bugmail: http://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/userprefs.cgi?tab=email ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are the QA contact for the bug.
Received on Wednesday, 9 March 2011 14:43:29 UTC