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jQuery Hotkeys lets you watch for keyboard events anywhere in your code supporting almost any key combination.

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jQuery.Hotkeys Build Status

#About jQuery Hotkeys is a plug-in that lets you easily add and remove handlers for keyboard events anywhere in your code supporting almost any key combination.

This plugin is based off of the plugin by Tzury Bar Yochay: jQuery.hotkeys

The syntax is as follows:

$(expression).bind(types, keys, handler);
$(expression).unbind(types, handler);

$(document).bind('keydown', 'ctrl+a', fn);

// e.g. replace '$' sign with 'EUR'
$('input.foo').bind('keyup', '$', function(){
  this.value = this.value.replace('$', 'EUR');
});

Syntax when wanting to use jQuery's on()/off methods:

$(expression).on(types, null, keys, handler);
$(expression).off(types, handler);

$(document).on('keydown', null, 'ctrl+a', fn);

// e.g. replace '$' sign with 'EUR'
$('input.foo').on('keyup', null, '$', function(){
  this.value = this.value.replace('$', 'EUR');
});     

Types

Supported types are 'keydown', 'keyup' and 'keypress'

Example

Example

Notes

Modifiers are not case sensitive (Ctrl == ctrl == cTRL)

If you want to use more than one modifiers (e.g. alt+ctrl+z) you should define them by an alphabetical order e.g. alt+ctrl+shift

Hotkeys aren't tracked if you're inside of an input element (unless you explicitly bind the hotkey directly to the input). This helps to avoid conflict with normal user typing.

You can use namespacing by adding a suffix to the event type (e.g. 'keyup.toggle')

jQuery Compatibility

Works with jQuery 1.4.2 and newer.

It is known to be working with all the major browsers on all available platforms (Win/Mac/Linux)

  • IE 6/7/8+
  • FF 1.5/2/3+
  • Opera-9+
  • Safari-3+
  • Chrome-0.2+

Addendum

Firefox is the most liberal one in the manner of letting you capture all short-cuts even those that are built-in in the browser such as Ctrl-t for new tab, or Ctrl-a for selecting all text. You can always bubble them up to the browser by returning true in your handler.

Others, (IE) either let you handle built-in short-cuts, but will add their functionality after your code has executed. Or (Opera/Safari) will not pass those events to the DOM at all.

So, if you bind Ctrl-Q or Alt-F4 and your Safari/Opera window is closed don't be surprised.

About

jQuery Hotkeys lets you watch for keyboard events anywhere in your code supporting almost any key combination.

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