时,只有当我们将滑块放到一个新位置时,Firefox 才会触发 onchange 事件,在该位置 Chrome 和其他人会在拖动滑块时触发 onchange 事件。如何在 Firefox 中进行拖动?函数 showVal(newVal){ document.getElementById("valBox").innerHTML=newVal; }" /> 时,只有当我们将滑块放到一个新位置时,Firefox 才会触发 onchange 事件,在该位置 Chrome 和其他人会在拖动滑块时触发 onchange 事件。如何在 Firefox 中进行拖动?函数 showVal(newVal){ document.getElementById("valBox").innerHTML=newVal; }"> 时,只有当我们将滑块放到一个新位置时,Firefox 才会触发 onchange 事件,在该位置 Chrome 和其他人会在拖动滑块时触发 onchange 事件。如何在 Firefox 中进行拖动?函数 showVal(newVal){ document.getElementById("valBox").innerHTML=newVal; }" />
ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

onchange event on input type=range is not triggering in Firefox while dragging

When I played with <input type="range">, Firefox triggers an onchange event only if we drop the slider to a new position where Chrome and others triggers onchange events while the slider is dragged.

How can I make it happen on dragging in Firefox?

function showVal(newVal){ document.getElementById("valBox").innerHTML=newVal; }

If the range element has focus, you can move the slider using the arrow keys. And in that case, also, the onchange does not fire. It was in troubleshooting that problem that I found this question.

y
yousoumar

Apparently Chrome and Safari are wrong: onchange should only be triggered when the user releases the mouse. To get continuous updates, you should use the oninput event, which will capture live updates in Firefox, Safari and Chrome, both from the mouse and the keyboard.

However, oninput is not supported in IE10, so your best bet is to combine the two event handlers, like this:

<span id="valBox"></span>
<input
  type="range"
  min="5"
  max="10"
  step="1"
  oninput="showVal(this.value)"
  onchange="showVal(this.value)"
/>

Check out this Bugzilla thread for more information.


Or $("#myelement").on("input change", function() { doSomething(); }); with jQuery.
Just note that with this solution, in chrome you will get two calls to the handler (one per event), so if you care for that, then you need to guard against it.
I was having issues with the 'change' event not firing in mobile chrome (v34), but adding 'input' into the equation has fixed it for me, whilst having no detrimental effects elsewhere.
@Jaime: "if you care for that, then you need to guard against it." How can I do it, please?
Sadly, onchange() doesn't work on mobile web like Android Chrome and iOS Safari. Any alternative suggestion?
y
yousoumar

SUMMARY:

I provide here a no-jQuery cross-browser desktop-and-mobile ability to consistently respond to range/slider interactions, something not possible in current browsers. It essentially forces all browsers to emulate IE11's on("change"... event for either their on("change"... or on("input"... events. The new function is...

function onRangeChange(r,f) {
  var n,c,m;
  r.addEventListener("input",function(e){n=1;c=e.target.value;if(c!=m)f(e);m=c;});
  r.addEventListener("change",function(e){if(!n)f(e);});
}

...where r is your range input element and f is your listener. The listener will be called after any interaction that changes the range/slider value but not after interactions that do not change that value, including initial mouse or touch interactions at the current slider position or upon moving off either end of the slider.

Problem:

As of early June 2016, different browsers differ in terms of how they respond to range/slider usage. Five scenarios are relevant:

initial mouse-down (or touch-start) at the current slider position initial mouse-down (or touch-start) at a new slider position any subsequent mouse (or touch) movement after 1 or 2 along the slider any subsequent mouse (or touch) movement after 1 or 2 past either end of the slider final mouse-up (or touch-end)

The following table shows how at least three different desktop browsers differ in their behaviour with respect to which of the above scenarios they respond to:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/L4Bw8.png

Solution:

The onRangeChange function provides a consistent and predictable cross-browser response to range/slider interactions. It forces all browsers to behave according to the following table:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/gZR33.png

In IE11, the code essentially allows everything to operate as per the status quo, i.e. it allows the "change" event to function in its standard way and the "input" event is irrelevant as it never fires anyway. In other browsers, the "change" event is effectively silenced (to prevent extra and sometimes not-readily-apparent events from firing). In addition, the "input" event fires its listener only when the range/slider's value changes. For some browsers (e.g. Firefox) this occurs because the listener is effectively silenced in scenarios 1, 4 and 5 from the above list.

(If you truly require a listener to be activated in either scenario 1, 4 and/or 5 you could try incorporating "mousedown"/"touchstart", "mousemove"/"touchmove" and/or "mouseup"/"touchend" events. Such a solution is beyond the scope of this answer.)

Functionality in Mobile Browsers:

I have tested this code in desktop browsers but not in any mobile browsers. However, in another answer on this page MBourne has shown that my solution here "...appears to work in every browser I could find (Win desktop: IE, Chrome, Opera, FF; Android Chrome, Opera and FF, iOS Safari)". (Thanks MBourne.)

Usage:

To use this solution, include the onRangeChange function from the summary above (simplified/minified) or the demo code snippet below (functionally identical but more self-explanatory) in your own code. Invoke it as follows:

onRangeChange(myRangeInputElmt, myListener);

where myRangeInputElmt is your desired <input type="range"> DOM element and myListener is the listener/handler function you want invoked upon "change"-like events.

Your listener may be parameter-less if desired or may use the event parameter, i.e. either of the following would work, depending on your needs:

var myListener = function() {...

or

var myListener = function(evt) {...

(Removing the event listener from the input element (e.g. using removeEventListener) is not addressed in this answer.)

Demo Description:

In the code snippet below, the function onRangeChange provides the universal solution. The rest of the code is simply an example to demonstrate its use. Any variable that begins with my... is irrelevant to the universal solution and is only present for the sake of the demo.

The demo shows the range/slider value as well as the number of times the standard "change", "input" and custom "onRangeChange" events have fired (rows A, B and C respectively). When running this snippet in different browsers, note the following as you interact with the range/slider:

In IE11, the values in rows A and C both change in scenarios 2 and 3 above while row B never changes.

In Chrome and Safari, the values in rows B and C both change in scenarios 2 and 3 while row A changes only for scenario 5.

In Firefox, the value in row A changes only for scenario 5, row B changes for all five scenarios, and row C changes only for scenarios 2 and 3.

In all of the above browsers, the changes in row C (the proposed solution) are identical, i.e. only for scenarios 2 and 3.

Demo Code:

// main function for emulating IE11's "change" event: function onRangeChange(rangeInputElmt, listener) { var inputEvtHasNeverFired = true; var rangeValue = {current: undefined, mostRecent: undefined}; rangeInputElmt.addEventListener("input", function(evt) { inputEvtHasNeverFired = false; rangeValue.current = evt.target.value; if (rangeValue.current !== rangeValue.mostRecent) { listener(evt); } rangeValue.mostRecent = rangeValue.current; }); rangeInputElmt.addEventListener("change", function(evt) { if (inputEvtHasNeverFired) { listener(evt); } }); } // example usage: var myRangeInputElmt = document.querySelector("input" ); var myRangeValPar = document.querySelector("#rangeValPar" ); var myNumChgEvtsCell = document.querySelector("#numChgEvtsCell"); var myNumInpEvtsCell = document.querySelector("#numInpEvtsCell"); var myNumCusEvtsCell = document.querySelector("#numCusEvtsCell"); var myNumEvts = {input: 0, change: 0, custom: 0}; var myUpdate = function() { myNumChgEvtsCell.innerHTML = myNumEvts["change"]; myNumInpEvtsCell.innerHTML = myNumEvts["input" ]; myNumCusEvtsCell.innerHTML = myNumEvts["custom"]; }; ["input", "change"].forEach(function(myEvtType) { myRangeInputElmt.addEventListener(myEvtType, function() { myNumEvts[myEvtType] += 1; myUpdate(); }); }); var myListener = function(myEvt) { myNumEvts["custom"] += 1; myRangeValPar.innerHTML = "range value: " + myEvt.target.value; myUpdate(); }; onRangeChange(myRangeInputElmt, myListener); table { border-collapse: collapse; } th, td { text-align: left; border: solid black 1px; padding: 5px 15px; }

range value: 50

rowevent type number of events
Astandard "change" events 0
Bstandard "input" events 0
Cnew custom "onRangeChange" events0

Credit:

While the implementation here is largely my own, it was inspired by MBourne's answer. That other answer suggested that the "input" and "change" events could be merged and that the resulting code would work in both desktop and mobile browsers. However, the code in that answer results in hidden "extra" events being fired, which in and of itself is problematic, and the events fired differ between browsers, a further problem. My implementation here solves those problems.

Keywords:

JavaScript input type range slider events change input browser compatability cross-browser desktop mobile no-jQuery


D
Daniel Tonon

I'm posting this as an answer because it deserves to be it's own answer rather than a comment under a less useful answer. I find this method much better than the accepted answer since it can keep all the js in a separate file from the HTML.

Answer provided by Jamrelian in his comment under the accepted answer.

$("#myelement").on("input change", function() {
    //do something
});

Just be aware of this comment by Jaime though

Just note that with this solution, in chrome you will get two calls to the handler (one per event), so if you care for that, then you need to guard against it.

As in it will fire the event when you have stopped moving the mouse, and then again when you release the mouse button.

Update

In relation to the change event and input event causing the functionality to trigger twice, this is pretty much a non-issue.

If you have a function firing off on input, it is extremely unlikely that there will be a problem when the change event fires.

input fires rapidly as you drag a range input slider. Worrying about one more function call firing at the end is like worrying about a single drop of water compared to the ocean of water that is the input events.

The reason for even including the change event at all is for the sake of browser compatibility (mainly with IE).


plus 1 For the only solution that works with internet explorer!! Did you test it on other browsers as well?
It's jQuery so the chances of it not working are pretty low. I haven't seen it not work anywhere myself. It even works on mobile which is great.
A
Andrew Willems

UPDATE: I am leaving this answer here as an example of how to use mouse events to use range/slider interactions in desktop (but not mobile) browsers. However, I have now also written a completely different and, I believe, better answer elsewhere on this page that uses a different approach to providing a cross-browser desktop-and-mobile solution to this problem.

Original answer:

Summary: A cross-browser, plain JavaScript (i.e. no-jQuery) solution to allow reading range input values without using on('input'... and/or on('change'... which work inconsistently between browsers.

As of today (late Feb, 2016), there is still browser inconsistency so I'm providing a new work-around here.

The problem: When using a range input, i.e. a slider, on('input'... provides continuously updated range values in Mac and Windows Firefox, Chrome and Opera as well as Mac Safari, while on('change'... only reports the range value upon mouse-up. In contrast, in Internet Explorer (v11), on('input'... does not work at all, and on('change'... is continuously updated.

I report here 2 strategies to get identical continuous range value reporting in all browsers using vanilla JavaScript (i.e. no jQuery) by using the mousedown, mousemove and (possibly) mouseup events.

Strategy 1: Shorter but less efficient

If you prefer shorter code over more efficient code, you can use this 1st solution which uses mousesdown and mousemove but not mouseup. This reads the slider as needed, but continues firing unnecessarily during any mouse-over events, even when the user has not clicked and is thus not dragging the slider. It essentially reads the range value both after 'mousedown' and during 'mousemove' events, slightly delaying each using requestAnimationFrame.

var rng = document.querySelector("input"); read("mousedown"); read("mousemove"); read("keydown"); // include this to also allow keyboard control function read(evtType) { rng.addEventListener(evtType, function() { window.requestAnimationFrame(function () { document.querySelector("div").innerHTML = rng.value; rng.setAttribute("aria-valuenow", rng.value); // include for accessibility }); }); }

50

Strategy 2: Longer but more efficient

If you need more efficient code and can tolerate longer code length, then you can use the following solution which uses mousedown, mousemove and mouseup. This also reads the slider as needed, but appropriately stops reading it as soon as the mouse button is released. The essential difference is that is only starts listening for 'mousemove' after 'mousedown', and it stops listening for 'mousemove' after 'mouseup'.

var rng = document.querySelector("input"); var listener = function() { window.requestAnimationFrame(function() { document.querySelector("div").innerHTML = rng.value; }); }; rng.addEventListener("mousedown", function() { listener(); rng.addEventListener("mousemove", listener); }); rng.addEventListener("mouseup", function() { rng.removeEventListener("mousemove", listener); }); // include the following line to maintain accessibility // by allowing the listener to also be fired for // appropriate keyboard events rng.addEventListener("keydown", listener);

50

Demo: Fuller explanation of the need for, and implementation of, the above work-arounds

The following code more fully demonstrates numerous aspects of this strategy. Explanations are embedded in the demonstration:

var select, inp, listen, unlisten, anim, show, onInp, onChg, onDn1, onDn2, onMv1, onMv2, onUp, onMvCombo1, onDnCombo1, onUpCombo2, onMvCombo2, onDnCombo2; select = function(selctr) { return document.querySelector(selctr); }; inp = select("input"); listen = function(evtTyp, cb) { return inp. addEventListener(evtTyp, cb); }; unlisten = function(evtTyp, cb) { return inp.removeEventListener(evtTyp, cb); }; anim = function(cb) { return window.requestAnimationFrame(cb); }; show = function(id) { return function() { select("#" + id + " td~td~td" ).innerHTML = inp.value; select("#" + id + " td~td~td~td").innerHTML = (Math.random() * 1e20).toString(36); // random text }; }; onInp = show("inp" ) ; onChg = show("chg" ) ; onDn1 = show("mdn1") ; onDn2 = function() {anim(show("mdn2")); }; onMv1 = show("mmv1") ; onMv2 = function() {anim(show("mmv2")); }; onUp = show("mup" ) ; onMvCombo1 = function() {anim(show("cmb1")); }; onDnCombo1 = function() {anim(show("cmb1")); listen("mousemove", onMvCombo1);}; onUpCombo2 = function() { unlisten("mousemove", onMvCombo2);}; onMvCombo2 = function() {anim(show("cmb2")); }; onDnCombo2 = function() {anim(show("cmb2")); listen("mousemove", onMvCombo2);}; listen("input" , onInp ); listen("change" , onChg ); listen("mousedown", onDn1 ); listen("mousedown", onDn2 ); listen("mousemove", onMv1 ); listen("mousemove", onMv2 ); listen("mouseup" , onUp ); listen("mousedown", onDnCombo1); listen("mousedown", onDnCombo2); listen("mouseup" , onUpCombo2); table {border-collapse: collapse; font: 10pt Courier;} th, td {border: solid black 1px; padding: 0 0.5em;} input {margin: 2em;} li {padding-bottom: 1em;}

Click on 'Full page' to see the demonstration properly.

eventrange valuerandom update indicator
Ainput 100-
Bchange 100-
Cmousedown 100-
Dmousedown using requestAnimationFrame100-
Emousemove 100-
Fmousemove using requestAnimationFrame100-
Gmouseup 100-
Hmousedown/move combo 100-
Imousedown/move/up combo 100-
  1. The 'range value' column shows the value of the 'value' attribute of the range-type input, i.e. the slider. The 'random update indicator' column shows random text as an indicator of whether events are being actively fired and handled.
  2. To see browser differences between input and change event implementations, use the slider in different browsers and compare A and B.
  3. To see the importance of 'requestAnimationFrame' on 'mousedown', click a new location on the slider and compare C (incorrect) and D (correct).
  4. To see the importance of 'requestAnimationFrame' on 'mousemove', click and drag but do not release the slider, and compare E (often 1 pixel behind) and F (correct).
  5. To see why an initial mousedown is required (i.e. to see why mousemove alone is insufficient), click and hold but do not drag the slider and compare E (incorrect), F (incorrect) and H (correct).
  6. To see how the mouse event combinations can provide a work-around for continuous update of a range-type input, use the slider in any manner and note whichever of A or B continuously updates the range value in your current browser. Then, while still using the slider, note that H and I provide the same continuously updated range value readings as A or B.
  7. To see how the mouseup event reduces unnecessary calculations in the work-around, use the slider in any manner and compare H and I. They both provide correct range value readings. However, then ensure the mouse is released (i.e. not clicked) and move it over the slider without clicking and notice the ongoing updates in the third table column for H but not I.


Really good info. Perhaps even add in touch events sometime? touchmove should be sufficient, and I think it can be treated just like mousemove in this case.
@nick, please see my other answer on this page for a different solution that does provide mobile browser functionality.
This is not an accessible answer, as keyboard navigation will not fire the events as they are all mouse centric
@LocalPCGuy, you're right. My answer broke the built-in keyboard-controllability of the sliders. I have updated the code to restore keyboard control. If you know of any other ways my code breaks built-in accessibility, let me know.
M
MBourne

Andrew Willem's solutions are not mobile device compatible.

Here's a modification of his second solution that works in Edge, IE, Opera, FF, Chrome, iOS Safari and mobile equivalents (that I could test):

Update 1: Removed "requestAnimationFrame" portion, as I agree it's not necessary:

var listener = function() {
  // do whatever
};

slider1.addEventListener("input", function() {
  listener();
  slider1.addEventListener("change", listener);
});
slider1.addEventListener("change", function() {
  listener();
  slider1.removeEventListener("input", listener);
}); 

Update 2: Response to Andrew's 2nd Jun 2016 updated answer:

Thanks, Andrew - that appears to work in every browser I could find (Win desktop: IE, Chrome, Opera, FF; Android Chrome, Opera and FF, iOS Safari).

Update 3: if ("oninput in slider) solution

The following appears to work across all the above browsers. (I cannot find the original source now.) I was using this, but it subsequently failed on IE and so I went looking for a different one, hence I ended up here.

if ("oninput" in slider1) {
    slider1.addEventListener("input", function () {
        // do whatever;
    }, false);
}

But before I checked your solution, I noticed this was working again in IE - perhaps there was some other conflict.


I confirmed that your solution works in two diverse desktop browsers: Mac Firefox and Windows IE11. I haven't personally been able to check any mobile possibilities. But this looks like a great update on my answer that broadens it to include mobile devices. (I assume that "input" and "change" accept both mouse input on a desktop system and touch input on a mobile system.) Very nice work that should be broadly applicable and worth getting recognition and implementation!
After digging further I have realized that your solution has several drawbacks. First, I believe the requestAnimationFrame is unnecessary. Second, the code fires extra events (at least 3 events upon, e.g. mouseup, in some browsers). Third, the exact events fired differs between some browsers. I thus provided a separate answer based on your initial idea of using a combination of "input" and "change" events, giving you credit for the original inspiration.
M
Mark Skelton

For a good cross-browser behavior, and understandable code, best is to use the onchange attribute in combination of a form:

function showVal(){ valBox.innerHTML = inVal.value; }

The same using oninput, the value is changed directly.

function showVal(){ valBox.innerHTML = inVal.value; }


G
Grogu

I'm posting this as an answer in case you are like me and cannot figure out why the range type input doesn't work on ANY mobile browsers. If you develop mobile apps on your laptop and use the responsive mode to emulate touch, you will notice the range doesn't even move when you have the touch simulator activated. It starts moving when you deactivate it. I went on for 2 days trying every piece of code I could find on the subject and could not make it work for the life of me. I provide a WORKING solution in this post.

Mobile Browsers And Hybrid Apps

Mobile browsers run using a component called Webkit for iOS and WebView for Android. The WebView/WebKit enables you to embed a web browser, which does not have any chrome or firefox (browser) controls including window frames, menus, toolbars and scroll bars into your activity layout. In other words, mobile browsers lack a lot of web components normally found in regular browsers. This is the problem with the range type input. If the user's browser doesn't support range type, it will fall back and treat it as a text input. This is why you cannot move the range when the touch simulator is activated.

Read more here on browser compatibility

jQuery Slider

jQuery provides a slider that somehow works with touch simulation but it is choppy and not very smooth. It wasn't satisfying to me and it probably wont be for you either but you can make it work more smoothly if you combine it with jqueryUi.

Best Solution : Range Touch

If you develop hybrid apps on your laptop, there is a simple and easy library you can use to enable range type input to work with touch events.

This library is called Range Touch.

DEMO

For more information on this issue check this thread here

Recreating the HTML5 range input for Mobile Safari (webkit)?


N
Nikita

Yet another approach - just set a flag on an element signaling which type of event should be handled:

function setRangeValueChangeHandler(rangeElement, handler) {
    rangeElement.oninput = (event) => {
        handler(event);
        // Save flag that we are using onInput in current browser
        event.target.onInputHasBeenCalled = true;
    };

    rangeElement.onchange = (event) => {
        // Call only if we are not using onInput in current browser
        if (!event.target.onInputHasBeenCalled) {
            handler(event);
        }
    };
}

P
Pang

You could use the JavaScript "ondrag" event to fire continuously. It is better than "input" due to the following reasons:

Browser support. Could differentiate between "ondrag" and "change" event. "input" fires for both drag and change.

In jQuery:

$('#sample').on('drag',function(e){

});

Reference: http://www.w3schools.com/TAgs/ev_ondrag.asp


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