The Range web API provides access to a slice of a document, including some very useful functions for obtaining the coordinates of the contents of that slice (getClientRects and getBoundingClientRect).
These could be extremely powerful when used in tandem with form input fields as they can allow for annotating text without having to wrap it in a span. Unfortunately, the contents of <input> and <textarea> elements remain inaccessible to this API because they are not rendered like regular Text nodes.
This library aims to provide a solution to that through a new InputRange class that implements a subset of the Range API.
Install the package:
npm install dom-input-rangeA new InputRange can be constructed with an element and offsets. For example, to get the coordinates of the bounding box around the first ten characters of a textarea:
import { InputRange } from "dom-input-range";
new InputRange(element, 0, 10).getBoundingClientRect();There is also a convenient fromSelection method for creating a range from the active selection. This can also be used to get the coordinates of the caret:
import { InputRange } from "dom-input-range";
InputRange.fromSelection(element).getClientRects();For the full api, see the docs for InputRange.
- Words: Highlight certain words in an input as the user types
- Caret: Show an indicator wherever the caret is located
- Playground: Play with a
<textarea>to see the difference betweengetBoundingClientRectandgetClientRects
This API is focused on providing an intuitive way to obtain the coordinates of text inside a form field element. It also implements a few other Range methods for consistency with the browser API, but it does not implement the entire class:
- All methods for querying information about the range are implemented
- This
InputRangecannot crossNodeboundaries, so any method that works withNodes is not implemented - Two new manipulation methods are present instead:
setStartOffsetandsetEndOffset - Methods that modify the range contents are not implemented - work with the input
valuedirectly instead
Behind the scenes, InputRange works by creating a 'clone' element that copies all of the styling and contents from the input element. This clone is then appended to the document and hidden from view so it can be queried. This low-level API is exposed as InputStyleClone for advanced use cases:
const clone = new InputStyleClone(input);
clone.element.getBoundingClientRect();Mounting a new element and copying styles can have a real performance impact, and this API has been carefully designed to minimize that. You can use InputStyleClone.for to share a single default clone instance for the lifetime of an input, if you only plan to query and not mutate the clone element:
const sharedClone = InputStyleClone.for(input);
clone.element.getBoundingClientRect();