Initializes a new instance of the InputNumber class.
The DOM element that hosts the control, or a CSS selector for the host element (e.g. '#theCtrl').
The JavaScript object containing initialization data for the control.
Gets or sets the format used to display the number being edited (see Globalize).
The format string is expressed as a .NET-style standard numeric format string.
Gets or sets a value that determines whether the user can edit the value using the mouse wheel.
The default value for this property is true.
Gets the DOM element that is hosting the control.
Gets the HTML input element hosted by the control.
Use this property in situations where you want to customize the attributes of the input element.
Gets or sets the "type" attribute of the HTML input element hosted by the control.
By default, this property is set to "tel", a value that causes mobile devices to show a numeric keypad that includes a negative sign and a decimal separator.
Use this property to change the default setting if the default does not work well for the current culture, device, or application. In those cases, try changing the value to "number" or "text."
Note that input elements with type "number" prevent selection in Chrome and therefore that type is not recommended. For more details, see this link: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/21177489/selectionstart-selectionend-on-input-type-number-no-longer-allowed-in-chrome
Gets or sets a value that determines whether the control is disabled.
Disabled controls cannot get mouse or keyboard events.
Gets or sets a value that indicates whether the user can modify the control value using the mouse and keyboard.
The default value for this property is false.
Gets or sets a value indicating whether the control value must be a number or whether it can be set to null (by deleting the content of the control).
The default value for this property is true.
Gets a value that indicates whether the control is currently handling a touch event.
Gets a value that indicates whether the control is currently being updated.
Gets or sets the largest number that the user can enter.
For details about using the min and max properties, please see the Using the min and max properties topic.
Gets or sets the smallest number that the user can enter.
For details about using the min and max properties, please see the Using the min and max properties topic.
Gets or sets the string shown as a hint when the control is empty.
Gets or sets a value that determines whether the spinner buttons should act as repeat buttons, firing repeatedly as long as the button remains pressed.
The default value for this property is true.
Gets a value indicating whether the control is hosted in an element with right-to-left layout.
Gets or sets a value indicating whether the control displays spinner buttons to increment or decrement the value (the step property must be set to a value other than zero).
The default value for this property is true.
Gets or sets the amount to add or subtract to the value property when the user clicks the spinner buttons.
The default value for this property is null, which hides the spinner buttons from the control.
Gets or sets a value of the tabindex attribute associated with the control.
tabindex attribute value can be defined statically for a Wijmo control by specifying it on the control's host HTML element. But this value can't be changed later during application lifecycle, because Wijmo controls have complex structure, and the control may need to propagate this attribute value to its internal element to work properly.
Because of this, to read or change control's tabindex dynamically, you should do it using this property.
Gets or sets the text shown in the control.
Gets or sets the current value of the control.
Gets or sets the template used to instantiate InputNumber controls.
Adds an event listener to an element owned by this Control.
The control keeps a list of attached listeners and their handlers, making it easier to remove them when the control is disposed (see the dispose and removeEventListener methods).
Failing to remove event listeners may cause memory leaks.
The passive parameter is set to false by default, which means the event handler may call event.preventDefault(). If you are adding passive handlers to touch or wheel events, setting this parameter to true will improve application performance.
For details on passive event listeners, please see Improving scrolling performance with passive listeners.
Target element for the event.
String that specifies the event.
Function to execute when the event occurs.
Whether the listener should be handled by the control before it is handled by the target element.
Indicates that the handler will never call preventDefault().
Applies the template to a new instance of a control, and returns the root element.
This method should be called by constructors of templated controls. Therefore, this method is not available. It is responsible for binding the template parts to the corresponding control members.
For example, the code below applies a template to an instance of an InputNumber control. The template must contain elements with the 'wj-part' attribute set to 'input', 'btn-inc', and 'btn-dec'. The control members '_tbx', '_btnUp', and '_btnDn' will be assigned references to these elements.
this.applyTemplate('wj-control wj-inputnumber', templateString, {
_tbx: 'input',
_btnUp: 'btn-inc',
_btnDn: 'btn-dec'
}, 'input');
@param classNames Names of classes to add to the control's host element. @param template An HTML string that defines the control template. @param parts A dictionary of part variables and their names. @param namePart Name of the part to be named after the host element. This determines how the control submits data when used in forms.
Suspends notifications until the next call to endUpdate.
Value to clamp.
Checks whether this control contains the focused element.
Executes a function within a beginUpdate/endUpdate block.
The control will not be updated until the function has been executed. This method ensures endUpdate is called even if the function throws an exception.
Function to be executed.
Resumes notifications suspended by calls to beginUpdate.
Sets the focus to this control.
Gets the HTML template used to create instances of the control.
This method traverses up the class hierarchy to find the nearest ancestor that specifies a control template. For example, if you specify a prototype for the ComboBox control, which does not specify a template, it will override the template defined by the DropDown base class (the nearest ancestor that does specify a template).
Determines whether an object has a property with the specified name.
A property name.
Initializes the control by copying the properties from a given object.
This method allows you to initialize controls using plain data objects instead of setting the value of each property in code.
For example:
grid.initialize({
itemsSource: myList,
autoGenerateColumns: false,
columns: [
{ binding: 'id', header: 'Code', width: 130 },
{ binding: 'name', header: 'Name', width: 60 }
]
});
// is equivalent to
grid.itemsSource = myList;
grid.autoGenerateColumns = false;
// etc.
The initialization data is type-checked as it is applied. If the initialization object contains unknown property names or invalid data types, this method will throw.
Object that contains the initialization data.
Invalidates the control causing an asynchronous refresh.
Whether to update the control layout as well as the content.
Determines whether an object exists in another object's prototype chain.
Another object whose prototype chain is to be checked.
Raises the invalidInput event.
If the event handler cancels the event, the control will keep the invalid input and the focus.
Raises the refreshing event.
Raises the textChanged event.
Raises the valueChanged event.
Determines whether a specified property is enumerable.
A property name.
Removes one or more event listeners attached to elements owned by this Control.
Target element for the event. If null, removes listeners attached to all targets.
String that specifies the event. If null, removes listeners attached to all events.
Handler to remove. If null, removes all handlers.
Whether the listener is capturing. If null, removes capturing and non-capturing listeners.
The number of listeners removed.
Sets the focus to the control and selects all its content.
Returns a date converted to a string using the current locale.
Returns a string representation of an object.
Returns the primitive value of the specified object.
Disposes of all Wijmo controls contained in an HTML element.
Container element.
Gets the control that is hosted in a given DOM element.
The DOM element that hosts the control, or a CSS selector for the host element (e.g. '#theCtrl').
Invalidates all Wijmo controls contained in an HTML element.
Use this method when your application has dynamic panels that change the control's visibility or dimensions. For example, splitters, accordions, and tab controls usually change the visibility of its content elements. In this case, failing to notify the controls contained in the element may cause them to stop working properly.
If this happens, you must handle the appropriate event in the dynamic container and call the Control.invalidateAll method so the contained Wijmo controls will update their layout information properly.
Container element. If set to null, all Wijmo controls on the page will be invalidated.
Refreshes all Wijmo controls contained in an HTML element.
This method is similar to invalidateAll, except the controls are updated immediately rather than after an interval.
Container element. If set to null, all Wijmo controls on the page will be invalidated.
Occurs when the control gets the focus.
Occurs when invalid input is detected.
Invalid input may occur when the user types or pastes a value that cannot be converted to the proper type, or a value that is outside the valid range.
If the event handler cancels the event, the control will retain the invalid content and the focus, so users can correct the error.
If the event is not canceled, the control will ignore the invalid input and will retain the original content.
Occurs when the control loses the focus.
Occurs after the control has refreshed its contents.
Occurs when the control is about to refresh its contents.
Occurs when the value of the text property changes.
Occurs when the value of the value property changes, either as a result of user actions or by assignment in code.
The InputNumber control allows users to enter numbers.
The control prevents users from accidentally entering invalid data and formats the number as it is edited.
Pressing the minus key reverses the sign of the value being edited, regardless of cursor position.
You may use the min and max properties to limit the range of acceptable values, and the step property to provide spinner buttons that increase or decrease the value with a click.
For details about using the min and max properties, please see the Using the min and max properties topic.
Use the value property to get or set the currently selected number.
The example below creates several InputNumber controls and shows the effect of using different formats.
Example