I currently have a number of inputs like this:
<input type="number" id="milliseconds">
This input field is used to represent a value in milliseconds.
I do however have multiple number inputs which take a value in dB or percentages.
<input type="number" id="decibel">
<input type="number" id="percentages">
What I would like to do is add a type suffix to the input field to let users know what kind of value the input represents. Something like this:
(This image is edited to show what result I want to have,I hid the up and down arrows from the input type as well).
I have tried to Google this but I can't seem to find anything about it. Does anyone know if this is possible, and how you can accomplish something like this?
You can use a wrapper <div>
for each input element and position the unit as a pseudo element ::after
with the content
of your corresponding units.
This approach works well for the absolute positioned pseudo elements will not effect the existing layouts. Nevertheless, the downside of this approach is, that you have to make sure, that the user input is not as long as the text field, otherwise the unit will be unpleasantly shown above. For a fixed user input length, it should work fine.
/* prepare wrapper element */
div {
display: inline-block;
position: relative;
}
/* position the unit to the right of the wrapper */
div::after {
position: absolute;
top: 2px;
right: .5em;
transition: all .05s ease-in-out;
}
/* move unit more to the left on hover
for arrow buttons will appear to the right of number inputs */
div:hover::after {
right: 1.5em;
}
/* set the unit abbreviation for each unit class */
.ms::after {
content: 'ms';
}
.db::after {
content: 'db';
}
.percent::after {
content: '%';
}
<div class="ms">
<input type="number" id="milliseconds" />
</div>
<hr />
<div class="db">
<input type="number" id="decibel" />
</div>
<hr />
<div class="percent">
<input type="number" id="percentages">
</div>
Another interesting approach would be to use a little of JavaScript in order to make suffix actually stick to the input text (which probably looks better):
const inputElement = document.getElementById('my-input');
const suffixElement = document.getElementById('my-suffix');
inputElement.addEventListener('input', updateSuffix);
updateSuffix();
function updateSuffix() {
const width = getTextWidth(inputElement.value, '12px arial');
suffixElement.style.left = width + 'px';
}
/**
* Uses canvas.measureText to compute and return the width of the given text of given font in pixels.
*
* @param {String} text The text to be rendered.
* @param {String} font The css font descriptor that text is to be rendered with (e.g. "bold 14px verdana").
*
* @see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/118241/calculate-text-width-with-javascript/21015393#21015393
*/
function getTextWidth(text, font) {
// re-use canvas object for better performance
var canvas = getTextWidth.canvas || (getTextWidth.canvas = document.createElement("canvas"));
var context = canvas.getContext("2d");
context.font = font;
var metrics = context.measureText(text);
return metrics.width;
}
#my-input-container {
display: inline-block;
position: relative;
font: 12px arial;
}
#my-input {
font: inherit;
}
#my-suffix {
position: absolute;
left: 0;
top: 3px;
color: #555;
padding-left: 5px;
font: inherit;
}
<div id="my-input-container">
<input type="number" id="my-input" value="1500">
<span id="my-suffix">ms.</span>
</div>
However, this is just a proof of concept. You will need to work on it a little further to make it production-ready, e.g. make it a reusable plugin.
Also, you will need to handle a case, where input element is getting overflowed.
If you have option to add elements to input then you can try this:-
<div class="container">
<input type="text" id="milliseconds">
<span class="ms">ms</span>
</div>
.container {
max-width: 208px; /*adjust it*/
margin: auto;
position: relative;
display: inline-block;
}
#milliseconds {
padding-right: 35px;
}
.ms {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
right: 10px;
}