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
disabled
to true, in that the element is drawn normally.
Formal syntax
How to read CSS syntax.none | enabled | disabled
Examples
input.example { /* the user will be able to select the text, but not change it. */ -moz-user-input: disabled; }