Modern React component for currency input. Fork from https://github.com/jsillitoe/react-currency-input
Supports custom decimal and thousand separators as well as precision.
Uniquely formats while inputting, including decimal and thousands separators, precision, prefixes and suffixes. I have not found any other currency inputs that do this, and the original hasn't been touched for quite a long time, so that is why I fork this.
- Now in TypeScript
- Supports React 17, 18
- Totally new automated testing setup with
CypressPlaywright (new in 1.4.2+) - Automated Testing setup much more thorough
- Caret selection redone and seems to work everywhere
- Uses react-device-detect to workaround issues with Gboard
There is a CodePen available which you may use to see the component in action, and play with all of it's various parameters to see how it works. It is written with React and TypeScript. Codepen Link
There is a second CodePen, which mirrors the demonstration application in the "examples" directory here in the source: Codepen Link
- Deprecated "onChange" option in favor of "onChangeEvent". This fixes the argument order to better match React's default input handling
- Updated dependencies to React 15
- Added parseFloat polyfill
- Persist events to deal with an issue of event pooling
- Other bug fixes.
npm install @ericblade/react-currency-input --save
You can store the value passed in to the change handler in your state.
import React from 'react'
import CurrencyInput from '@ericblade/react-currency-input';
const MyApp = React.createClass({
getInitialState(){
return ({amount: "0.00"});
},
handleChange(event, maskedvalue, floatvalue){
this.setState({amount: maskedvalue});
},
render() {
return (
<div>
<CurrencyInput value={this.state.amount} onChangeEvent={this.handleChange}/>
</div>
);
}
});
export default MyApp
You can also assign a reference then access the value using a call to getMaskedValue().
import React from 'react'
import CurrencyInput from '@ericblade/react-currency-input';
const MyApp = React.createClass({
handleSubmit(event){
event.preventDefault();
console.log(this.refs.myinput.getMaskedValue())
},
render() {
return (
<form onSubmit={this.handleSubmit}>
<CurrencyInput ref="myinput" />
</form>
);
}
});
export default MyApp
Specify custom decimal and thousand separators:
// 1.234.567,89
<CurrencyInput decimalSeparator="," thousandSeparator="." />
Specify a specific precision:
// 123,456.789
<CurrencyInput precision="3" />
// 123,456,789
<CurrencyInput precision="0" />
Optionally set a currency symbol as a prefix or suffix
// $1,234,567.89
<CurrencyInput prefix="$" />
// 1,234,567.89 kr
<CurrencyInput suffix=" kr" />
Negative signs come before the prefix
// -$20.00
<CurrencyInput prefix="$" value="-20.00" />
All other attributes are applied to the input element. For example, you can integrate bootstrap styling:
<CurrencyInput className="form-control" />
Option | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|
value | 0 | The initial currency value |
onChangeEvent | n/a | Callback function to handle value changes |
precision | 2 | Number of digits after the decimal separator |
decimalSeparator | '.' | The decimal separator |
thousandSeparator | ',' | The thousand separator |
inputType | "text" | Input field tag type. You may want to use number or tel * |
allowNegative | false | Allows negative numbers in the input |
allowEmpty | false | If no value is given, defines if it starts as null (true ) or '' (false ) |
selectAllOnFocus | false | Selects all text on focus or does not |
prefix | '' | Currency prefix |
suffix | '' | Currency suffix |
autoFocus | false | Autofocus |
onClick | none | Passed through to input |
onFocus | none | Called after internal focus handling |
onBlur | none | Called after internal blur handling |
style | none | Passed through to input |
id | none | Passed through to input |
tabIndex | none | Passed through to input |
*Note: Enabling any mask-related features such as prefix, suffix or separators with an inputType="number" or "tel" could trigger errors. Most of those characters would be invalid in such input types.