Detect Caps Lock with JavaScript

By  on  

Anyone is capable of having their caps lock key on at any given time without realizing so. Users can easily spot unwanted caps lock when typing in most inputs, but when using a password input, the problem isn't so obvious. That leads to the user's password being incorrect, which is an annoyance. Ideally developers could let the user know their caps lock key is activated.

To detect if a user has their keyboard's caps lock turn on, we'll employ KeyboardEvent's getModifierState method:

document.querySelector('input[type=password]').addEventListener('keyup', function (keyboardEvent) {
    const capsLockOn = keyboardEvent.getModifierState('CapsLock');
    if (capsLockOn) {
        // Warn the user that their caps lock is on?
    }
});

I'd never seen getModifierState used before, so I explored the W3C documentation to discover other useful values:

dictionary EventModifierInit : UIEventInit {
  boolean ctrlKey = false;
  boolean shiftKey = false;
  boolean altKey = false;
  boolean metaKey = false;

  boolean modifierAltGraph = false;
  boolean modifierCapsLock = false;
  boolean modifierFn = false;
  boolean modifierFnLock = false;
  boolean modifierHyper = false;
  boolean modifierNumLock = false;
  boolean modifierScrollLock = false;
  boolean modifierSuper = false;
  boolean modifierSymbol = false;
  boolean modifierSymbolLock = false;
};

getModifierState provides a wealth of insight as to the user's keyboard during key-centric events. I wish I had known about getModifier earlier in my career!

Recent Features

  • By
    Creating Scrolling Parallax Effects with CSS

    Introduction For quite a long time now websites with the so called "parallax" effect have been really popular. In case you have not heard of this effect, it basically includes different layers of images that are moving in different directions or with different speed. This leads to a...

  • By
    7 Essential JavaScript Functions

    I remember the early days of JavaScript where you needed a simple function for just about everything because the browser vendors implemented features differently, and not just edge features, basic features, like addEventListener and attachEvent.  Times have changed but there are still a few functions each developer should...

Incredible Demos

  • By
    jQuery topLink Plugin

    Last week I released a snippet of code for MooTools that allowed you to fade in and out a "to the top" link on any page. Here's how to implement that functionality using jQuery. The XHTML A simple link. The CSS A little CSS for position and style. The jQuery...

  • By
    Dynamically Create Charts Using MooTools MilkChart and Google Analytics

    The prospect of creating graphics charts with JavaScript is exciting. It's also the perfect use of JavaScript -- creating non-essential features with unobtrusive scripting. I've created a mix of PHP (the Analytics class), HTML, and MooTools JavaScript that will connect to Google Analytics...

Discussion

  1. Great to know, thanks! Even has modifierHyper!

  2. Craig

    How about they just get rid of CAPS LOCK keys, or relegate them to a far off corner of the keyboard?

    It is the most useless key, taking up real estate in a valuable position.

    At a minimum, the OS should allow for a key re-assignment.

    I HATE CAPS LOCK keys. And did not use it once in this rant.

  3. Awesome tip! I’ve run into the Caps Lock problem in password fields quite a few times, and this getModifierState method is a straightforward but powerful fix. Love the clear example—I’m definitely going to incorporate this into my login forms.

    Plus, it’s neat to see it can recognize other keys like Num Lock and Fn. Thanks for sharing this-it’s a little detail that can significantly enhance user experience!

Wrap your code in <pre class="{language}"></pre> tags, link to a GitHub gist, JSFiddle fiddle, or CodePen pen to embed!