Non-standard
This feature is non-standard and is not on a standards track. Do not use it on production sites facing the Web: it will not work for every user. There may also be large incompatibilities between implementations and the behavior may change in the future.
Summary
In Mozilla applications, -moz-user-input determines if an element will accept user input. A similar property user-focus was proposed in early drafts of a predecessor of the CSS3 UI specification but was rejected by the working group.
| Initial value | none |
|---|---|
| Applies to | all elements |
| Inherited | yes |
| Media | visual |
| Computed value | as specified |
| Animatable | no |
| Canonical order | the unique non-ambiguous order defined by the formal grammar |
-moz-user-input was one of the proposals leading to the proposed CSS 3 user-input property, which has not yet reached Candidate Recommendation (call for implementations).
For elements that normally take user input, such as a <textarea>, the initial value of -moz-user-input is enabled.
Syntax
/* Keyword values */ -moz-user-input: none; -moz-user-input: enabled; -moz-user-input: disabled; /* Global values */ -moz-user-input: inherit; -moz-user-input: initial; -moz-user-input: unset;
Values
- none
- The element does not respond to user input, and it does not become
:active. - enabled
- The element accepts user input. For textboxes, this is the default behavior.
- disabled
- The element does not accept user input. However, this is not the same as setting
disabledto true, in that the element is drawn normally.
Formal syntax
none | enabled | disabled
Examples
input.example {
/* the user will be able to select the text, but not change it. */
-moz-user-input: disabled;
}