Set min/max on TextField type="number"?

ReactjsMaterial UiRedux Form

Reactjs Problem Overview


I'm using Material-UI v1.0.0-beta23 along with redux-form and redux-form-material-ui. I have a Field that is type number and I want to set the min and max values on the tag. I've tried both inputProps and min/max and neither seem to do what I want. I looked at the source code and don't see an obvious way to do this. Is it possible, and if so, how?

Here is my JSX showing things I've tried.

<Field
  name="maxNodeSelectedCount"
  component={TextField}
  label="Max Node Selected Count"
  type="number"
  inputProps={{ min: 0, max: 10 }}
  min={11}
  max={20}
  format={formatOption}
  normalize={normalizeOption}
  {...propertyFieldDefaults}
/>

Here is what the DOM looks like:

<input type="number" class="MuiInput-input-346 MuiInput-inputSingleline-349 MuiInput-inputDense-347" value="-3" name="options.maxNodeSelectedCount">

Reactjs Solutions


Solution 1 - Reactjs

The redux-form Field will pass props through to the component: >All other props will be passed along to the element generated by the component prop.

The TextField has a property named InputProps which can be used to pass props to the Input component it renders. This is also true if you're using redux-form-material-ui. Its TextField is simply a wrapper for the material-ui component.

The material-ui Input component has a property named inputProps which can be used to pass props to the input element it renders.

Ok, so what do I do?

You need to pass props all the way through, from Field, to TextField, to Input, to the input element.

So if we set InputProps on Field, it will be passed to TextField, which will pass it to the Input component. If the object we pass contains an inner inputProps (intentional lowercase 'i'), the Input component will pass it to the input element.

A game of hot-proptato:

Basically, define an inputProps object within InputProps and apply it to Field:

<Field
    name="maxNodeSelectedCount"
    component={TextField}
    label="Max Node Selected Count"
    type="number"
    InputProps={{ inputProps: { min: 0, max: 10 } }}
    format={formatOption}
    normalize={normalizeOption}
    {...propertyFieldDefaults}
  />
  • Field passes InputProps to TextField
  • TextField passes the contents of InputProps to the Input component
  • Input passed the contents of inputProps to the input element

There is a caveat with this:

The current implementation of TextField sets its own value for inputProps so that the inputClassName is applied to the input element.

By handing your own value of inputProps to TextField, you will overwrite the version applied by TextField, leaving inputClassName unset. If are using inputClassName you will need to include it in the inner inputProps object.

EDIT: I have submitted an issue and pull request to address this caveat in a future release.

Solution 2 - Reactjs

Simply use your inputprops well

<TextField 
    type="number"
    InputProps={{
        inputProps: { 
            max: 100, min: 10 
        }
    }}
    label="what ever"
/>

notice the upper and lower case in the inputprops

credit to Ken Gregory

Solution 3 - Reactjs

You can use inputProps to apply any attributes to the native input element, including min and max.

<TextField type="number" inputProps={{ min: 4, max: 10 }} />

Edit: Please note that the min/max attributes do not prevent the user from typing invalid values in the TextField. To restrict what the user can type, you can validate the value by adding onclick handler like below:

const min = 0;
const max = 10;

export default function BasicTextFields() {
  const [value, setValue] = useState<number>();

  return (
    <div>
      <TextField
        type="number"
        inputProps={{ min, max }}
        value={value}
        onChange={(e) => {
          var value = parseInt(e.target.value, 10);

          if (value > max) value = max;
          if (value < min) value = min;

          setValue(value);
        }}
      />
    </div>
  );
}

Edit 47798104/set-min-max-on-textfield-type-number

Solution 4 - Reactjs

Put type inside InputProps:

      <Field
        name="number"
        label="Number"
        component={TextField}
        InputProps={{
          inputProps: {
            type: 'number',
            min: 0, max: 25,
          },
        }}
      />

Solution 5 - Reactjs

The other answers didn't work for me.

Material UI has a section for 3rd party integration here

It really does the job of writing only numbers and not allowing negatives.

import NumberFormat from 'react-number-format';

function NumberFormatCustom(props) {
    const { inputRef, onChange, ...other } = props;
    
     return (
            <NumberFormat
                {...other}
                getInputRef={inputRef}
                allowNegative={false}
                onValueChange={(values) => {
                    onChange({
                        target: {
                            name: props.name,
                            value: values.value,
                        },
                    });
                }}
                isNumericString
            />
        );
}
    
<TextField
    label="react-number-format"
    value={values.numberformat}
    onChange={handleChange}
    name="numberformat"
    id="formatted-numberformat-input"
    InputProps={{
          inputComponent: NumberFormatCustom,
     }}
/>

Solution 6 - Reactjs

This will definitely work

handleMobileNumber = (e) => {
 if (e.target.value.split("").length <= 10) {
  this.setState({
    mobileNumber: e.target.value,
  });
 }
};

<TextField
  label="Enter Mobile Number"
   variant="outlined"
   value={this.state.mobileNumber}
   onChange={this.handleMobileNumber}
   type="number"
/>

Solution 7 - Reactjs

<TextField
            label="Username"
            id="outlined-start-adornment"
            variant="outlined"
            inputProps={{minlength:5, maxLength: 20}}
          />

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMike SuiterView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - ReactjsKen GregoryView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - ReactjsChukwuEmekaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - ReactjsNearHuscarlView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - ReactjsIvan SeredkinView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - ReactjsFiuryView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - ReactjsHrishikesh BaidyaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - Reactjsuser3037418View Answer on Stackoverflow