Guides / Building Search UI / UI & UX patterns

Disabling Default Browser Behavior on Search Inputs

Introduction

When a user start typing to an HTML input, there might be a legacy auto-completion feature displayed. In this tutorial we’ll see how to disable this behavior.

Input markup

A classic the search html input definition looks like:

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<input type="text" id="search" />

Updating input markup

There are four input attributes that we can define to cancel default browsers’ behavior:

  • autocomplete="off"
  • autocorrect="off"
  • autocapitalize="none"
  • spellcheck="false"

Note that autocomplete="off" doesn’t work on Chrome, which will only disable autocomplete with an invalid value like autocomplete="nope". See MDN on disabling autocompletion

Since this value is not a valid one for the autocomplete attribute, the browser has no way to match it, and stops trying to autocomplete the field. Please note that this does not work in Firefox; it completely disregards the invalid value and reverts to default autocompletion behavior.

The updated input should look like this:

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<input type="text"
       id="search"
       autocomplete="off"
       autocorrect="off"
       autocapitalize="none"
       spellcheck="false" />

More information on input properties

For more information check out the reference of each of those attributes:

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