Description
<sp-number-field>
elements are used for numeric inputs. Upon interaction via the ArrowUp or ArrowDown keys, the scroll wheel, or the stepper UI, when not hidden by the hide-stepper
attribute, the input value incrementally increases or decreases by the value of the step
attribute. The shift key can be used to apply steps at 10 time (or the value of the step-modifier
attribute times) their normal rate.
Usage
yarn add @spectrum-web-components/number-field
Import the side effectful registration of <sp-number-field>
via:
import '@spectrum-web-components/number-field/sp-number-field.js';
When looking to leverage the NumberField
base class as a type and/or for extension purposes, do so via:
import { NumberField } from '@spectrum-web-components/number-field';
Sizes
Small
<sp-number-field
label="Size"
value="1024"
size="s"
style="--spectrum-stepper-width: 85px"
></sp-number-field>
Medium
<sp-number-field
label="Size"
value="1024"
size="m"
style="--spectrum-stepper-width: 110px"
></sp-number-field>
Large
<sp-number-field
label="Size"
value="1024"
size="l"
style="--spectrum-stepper-width: 135px"
></sp-number-field>
Extra Large
<sp-number-field
label="Size"
value="1024"
size="xl"
style="--spectrum-stepper-width: 160px"
></sp-number-field>
Number formatting
An <sp-number-field>
element will process its numeric value with new Intl.NumberFormat(this.resolvedLanguage, this.formatOptions).format(this.value)
in order to prepare it for visual delivery in the input. In order to customize this processing supply your own Intl.NumberFormatOptions
via the formatOptions
property, or format-options
attribute as seen below.
this.resolvedLanguage
represents the language in which the <sp-number-field>
element is currently being delivered. By default, this value will represent the language established by the lang
attribute on the root <html>
element while falling back to navigator.language
when that is not present. This value can be customized via a language context provided by a parent element that listens for the sp-language-context
event and supplies update language settings to the callback
function contained therein. Applications leveraging the <sp-theme>
element to manage the visual delivery or text direction of their content will be also be provided a reactive context for supplying language information to its descendants.
Decimals
The following example uses the signDisplay
option to include the plus sign for positive numbers, for example to display an offset from some value. In addition, it always displays a minimum of 1 digit after the decimal point, and allows up to 2 fraction digits. If the user enters more than 2 fraction digits, the result will be rounded.
<sp-field-label for="decimals">Adjust exposure</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field
id="decimals"
value="0"
style="width: 100px"
format-options='{
"signDisplay": "exceptZero",
"minimumFractionDigits": 1,
"maximumFractionDigits": 2
}'
></sp-number-field>
Percentages
The style: 'percent'
option can be passed to the formatOptions
property to treat the value as a percentage. In this mode, the value is multiplied by 100 before it is displayed, i.e. 0.45
is displayed as "45%". The reverse is also true: when the user enters a value, the change
event will be triggered with the entered value divided by 100. When the percent option is enabled, the default step automatically changes to 0.01 such that incrementing and decrementing occurs by 1%. This can be overridden with the step property.
<sp-field-label for="percents">Sales tax</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field
id="percents"
style="width: 200px"
value="0.05"
format-options='{
"style": "percent"
}'
></sp-number-field>
Currency values
The style: 'currency'
option can be passed to the formatOptions
property to treat the value as a currency value. The currency
option must also be passed to set the currency code (e.g. USD
) to use. In addition, the currencyDisplay
option can be used to choose whether to display the currency symbol
, currency code
, or currency name
. Finally, the currencySign
option can be set to accounting
to use accounting notation for negative numbers, which uses parentheses rather than a minus sign in some locales.
If you need to allow the user to change the currency, you should include a separate dropdown next to the sp-number-field
. The sp-number-field
itself will not determine the currency from the user input.
<sp-field-label for="currency">Transaction amount</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field
id="currency"
style="width: 200px"
value="45"
format-options='{
"style": "currency",
"currency": "EUR",
"currencyDisplay": "code",
"currencySign": "accounting"
}'
></sp-number-field>
Units
The style: 'unit'
option can be passed to the formatOptions
property to format the value with a unit of measurement. The unit
option must also be passed to set which unit to use (e.g. inch
). In addition, the unitDisplay
option can be used to choose whether to display the unit in long
, short
, or narrow
format.
If you need to allow the user to change the unit, you should include a separate dropdown next to the number field. The number field itself will not determine the unit from the user input.
Note: The unit style is not currently supported in Safari. A polyfill may be necessary.
<sp-field-label for="units">Package width</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field
id="units"
style="width: 200px"
value="4"
format-options='{
"style": "unit",
"unit": "inch",
"unitDisplay": "long"
}'
></sp-number-field>
Units not included in Intl.NumberFormatOptions
While Intl.NumberFormatOptions
does support a wide range of units, it is possible to encounter units (e.g. the graphics units of pixel
, pixels
, points
, etc.) that are not supported therein. When this occurs, an <sp-number-field>
element will attempt to polyfill support for this unit. See the following example delivering { style: "unit", unit: "px" }
below:
<sp-field-label for="units">Document width in pixels</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field
id="units"
style="width: 200px"
value="500"
format-options='{
"style": "unit",
"unit": "px"
}'
></sp-number-field>
Note: the polyfilling done here is very simplistic and is triggered by supplying options that would otherwise cause the Intl.NumberFormat()
call to throw an error. Once the unsupporting unit of px
causes the construction of the object to throw, a back up formatter/parser pair will be created without the supplied unit data. When the style
is set to unit
, the unit
value of will be adopted as the static unit display. This means that neither pluralization or translation will be handled within the <sp-number-field>
element itself. If pluralization or translation is important to the delivered interface, please be sure to handle passing those strings into to element via the formatOptions
property reactively to the value of the element or locale of that page in question.
Minimum and maximum values
The max
and max
properties can be used to limit the entered value to a specific range. The value will be clamped when the user commits the value to the <sp-number-field>
element. In addition, the increment and decrement buttons will be disabled when the value is within one step value from the bounds. Ranges can be open ended by only providing a value for either min
or max
rather than both.
If a valid range is known ahead of time, it is a good idea to provide it to <sp-number-field>
so it can optimize the experience. For example, when the minimum value is greater than or equal to zero, it is possible to use a numeric keyboard on iOS rather than a full text keyboard (necessary to enter a minus sign).
<sp-field-label for="red">Red value</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field id="red" value="4" min="0" max="255"></sp-number-field>
Step values
The step prop can be used to snap the value to certain increments. If there is a min
defined, the steps are calculated starting from that minimum value. For example, if min === 2
, and step === 3
, the valid step values would be 2, 5, 8, 11, etc. If no min
is defined, the steps are calculated starting from zero and extending in both directions. In other words, such that the values are evenly divisible by the step. A step can be any positive decimal. If no step is defined, any decimal value may be typed, but incrementing and decrementing snaps the value to an integer.
If the user types a value that is between two steps and blurs the input, the value will be snapped to the nearest step. When incrementing or decrementing, the value is snapped to the nearest step that is higher or lower, respectively. When incrementing or decrementing from an empty field, the value starts at the minValue or maxValue, respectively, if defined. Otherwise, the value starts from 0.
<sp-field-label
for="step"
>Step</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field
id="step"
step="10"
></sp-number-field>
<sp-field-label
for="step-min"
>Step + min</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field
id="step-min"
min="2"
step="3"
></sp-number-field>
<sp-field-label
for="step-min-max"
>Step + min + max</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field
id="step-min-max"
min="2"
max="21"
step="3"
></sp-number-field>
Default value
The <sp-number-field>
component doesn't manage a default value by itself. This means that consumers can set the value of the number-field as an empty string by clearing the input. If we want the number-field to reset to a default-value
when the user clears the input, we can listen for the change
event on the number-field component and set its value to the desired default-value
if the input is empty.
<sp-field-label for="default">
Default value of this number field is 42
</sp-field-label>
<sp-number-field id="default" value="20"></sp-number-field>
<script type="module">
customElements.whenDefined('sp-number-field').then(() => {
const numberField = document.querySelector('#default');
numberField.addEventListener('change', (event) => {
const target = event.target;
if (isNaN(target.value)) {
target.value = '42';
}
});
});
</script>