The textarea component is used for multi-line text input. A native textarea element is rendered inside of the component. The user experience and interactivity of the textarea component is improved by having control over the native textarea.
Unlike the native textarea element, the Ionic textarea does not support loading its value from the inner content. The textarea value should be set in the value attribute.
Labels should be used to describe the textarea. They can be used visually, and they will also be read out by screen readers when the user is focused on the textarea. This makes it easy for the user to understand the intent of the textarea. Textarea has several ways to assign a label:
label property: used for plaintext labels
label slot: used for custom HTML labels (experimental)
aria-label: used to provide a label for screen readers but adds no visible label
Labels will take up the width of their content by default. Developers can use the labelPlacement property to control how the label is placed relative to the control.
While plaintext labels should be passed in via the label property, if custom HTML is needed, it can be passed through the label slot instead.
Note that this feature is considered experimental because it relies on a simulated version of Web Component slots. As a result, the simulated behavior may not exactly match the native slot behavior.
Helper and error text can be used inside of a textarea with the helperText and errorText property. The error text will not be displayed unless the ion-invalid and ion-touched classes are added to the ion-textarea. This ensures errors are not shown before the user has a chance to enter data.
In Angular, this is done automatically through form validation. In JavaScript, React and Vue, the class needs to be manually added based on your own validation.
The textarea counter is text that displays under a textarea to notify the user of how many characters have been entered out of the total that the textarea will accept. When adding counter, the default behavior is to format the value that gets displayed as inputLength / maxLength. This behavior can be customized by passing in a formatter function to the counterFormatter property.
A simpler textarea syntax was introduced in Ionic 7.0. This new syntax reduces the boilerplate required to setup an textarea, resolves accessibility issues, and improves the developer experience.
Developers can perform this migration one textarea at a time. While developers can continue using the legacy syntax, we recommend migrating as soon as possible.
Remove ion-label and use the label property on ion-textarea instead. The placement of the label can be configured using the labelPlacement property on ion-textarea.
Move textarea-specific properties from ion-item on to ion-textarea. This includes the counter, counterFormatter, fill, and shape properties.
Remove usages of the helper and error slots on ion-item and use the helperText and errorText properties on ion-textarea instead.
JavaScript
Angular
React
Vue
<!-- Label and Label Position --> <!-- Before --> <ion-item> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textarea></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <ion-item> <ion-textarealabel="Label:"label-placement="floating"></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- Fill --> <!-- Before --> <ion-itemfill="outline"shape="round"> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textarea></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <!-- Textareas using `fill` should not be placed in ion-item --> <ion-textareafill="outline"shape="round"label="Label:"label-placement="floating"></ion-textarea> <!-- Textarea-specific features on ion-item --> <!-- Before --> <ion-itemcounter="true"> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textareamaxlength="100"></ion-textarea> <divslot="helper">Enter text</div> <divslot="error">Please enter text</div> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <!-- Metadata such as counters and helper text should not be used when a textarea is in an item/list. If you need to provide more context on a textarea, consider using an ion-note underneath the ion-list. --> <ion-textarea label="Label:" counter="true" maxlength="100" helper-text="Enter text" error-text="Please enter text" ></ion-textarea>
<!-- Label and Label Position --> <!-- Before --> <ion-item> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textarea></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <ion-item> <ion-textarealabel="Label:"labelPlacement="floating"></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- Fill --> <!-- Before --> <ion-itemfill="outline"shape="round"> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textarea></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <!-- Textareas using `fill` should not be placed in ion-item --> <ion-textareafill="outline"shape="round"label="Label:"labelPlacement="floating"></ion-textarea> <!-- Textarea-specific features on ion-item --> <!-- Before --> <ion-item[counter]="true"> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textareamaxlength="100"></ion-textarea> <divslot="helper">Enter text</div> <divslot="error">Please enter text</div> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <!-- Metadata such as counters and helper text should not be used when a textarea is in an item/list. If you need to provide more context on a textarea, consider using an ion-note underneath the ion-list. --> <ion-textarea label="Label:" [counter]="true" maxlength="100" helperText="Enter text" errorText="Please enter text" ></ion-textarea>
{/* Label and Label Position */} {/* Before */} <IonItem> <IonLabelposition="floating">Label:</IonLabel> <IonTextarea></IonTextarea> </IonItem> {/* After */} <IonItem> <IonTextarealabel="Label:"labelPlacement="floating"></IonTextarea> </IonItem> {/* Fill */} {/* Before */} <IonItemfill="outline"shape="round"> <IonLabelposition="floating">Label:</IonLabel> <IonTextarea></IonTextarea> </IonItem> {/* After */} {/* Textareas using `fill` should not be placed in IonItem */} <IonTextareafill="outline"shape="round"label="Label:"labelPlacement="floating"></IonTextarea> {/* Textarea-specific features on IonItem */} {/* Before */} <IonItemcounter={true}> <IonLabelposition="floating">Label:</IonLabel> <IonTextareamaxlength="100"></IonTextarea> <divslot="helper">Enter text</div> <divslot="error">Please enter text</div> </IonItem> {/* After */} {/* Metadata such as counters and helper text should not be used when a textarea is in an item/list. If you need to provide more context on a textarea, consider using an IonNote underneath the IonList. */} <IonTextarea label="Label:" counter={true} maxlength="100" helperText="Enter text" errorText="Please enter text" ></IonTextarea>
<!-- Label and Label Position --> <!-- Before --> <ion-item> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textarea></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <ion-item> <ion-textarealabel="Label:"label-placement="floating"></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- Fill --> <!-- Before --> <ion-itemfill="outline"shape="round"> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textarea></ion-textarea> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <!-- Textareas using `fill` should not be placed in ion-item --> <ion-textareafill="outline"shape="round"label="Label:"label-placement="floating"></ion-textarea> <!-- Textarea-specific features on ion-item --> <!-- Before --> <ion-item:counter="true"> <ion-labelposition="floating">Label:</ion-label> <ion-textareamaxlength="100"></ion-textarea> <divslot="helper">Enter text</div> <divslot="error">Please enter text</div> </ion-item> <!-- After --> <!-- Metadata such as counters and helper text should not be used when a textarea is in an item/list. If you need to provide more context on a textarea, consider using an ion-note underneath the ion-list. --> <ion-textarea label="Label:" :counter="true" maxlength="100" helper-text="Enter text" error-text="Please enter text" ></ion-textarea>
Ionic uses heuristics to detect if an app is using the modern textarea syntax. In some instances, it may be preferable to continue using the legacy syntax. Developers can set the legacy property on ion-textarea to true to force that instance of the textarea to use the legacy syntax.
While not required, this interface can be used in place of the CustomEvent interface for stronger typing with Ionic events emitted from this component.
Indicates whether and how the text value should be automatically capitalized as it is entered/edited by the user. Available options: "off", "none", "on", "sentences", "words", "characters".
The color to use from your application's color palette. Default options are: "primary", "secondary", "tertiary", "success", "warning", "danger", "light", "medium", and "dark". For more information on colors, see theming.
If true, a character counter will display the ratio of characters used and the total character limit. Developers must also set the maxlength property for the counter to be calculated correctly.
Where to place the label relative to the textarea. "start": The label will appear to the left of the textarea in LTR and to the right in RTL. "end": The label will appear to the right of the textarea in LTR and to the left in RTL. "floating": The label will appear smaller and above the textarea when the textarea is focused or it has a value. Otherwise it will appear on top of the textarea. "stacked": The label will appear smaller and above the textarea regardless even when the textarea is blurred or has no value. "fixed": The label has the same behavior as "start" except it also has a fixed width. Long text will be truncated with ellipses ("...").
Set the legacy property to true to forcibly use the legacy form control markup. Ionic will only opt components in to the modern form markup when they are using either the aria-label attribute or the default slot that contains the label text. As a result, the legacy property should only be used as an escape hatch when you want to avoid this automatic opt-in behavior. Note that this property will be removed in an upcoming major release of Ionic, and all form components will be opted-in to using the modern form markup.
The ionChange event is fired when the user modifies the textarea's value. Unlike the ionInput event, the ionChange event is fired when the element loses focus after its value has been modified.
Yes
ionFocus
Emitted when the input has focus.
Yes
ionInput
The ionInput event is fired each time the user modifies the textarea's value. Unlike the ionChange event, the ionInput event is fired for each alteration to the textarea's value. This typically happens for each keystroke as the user types.
When clearOnEdit is enabled, the ionInput event will be fired when the user clears the textarea by performing a keydown event.
The label text to associate with the textarea. Use the labelPlacement property to control where the label is placed relative to the textarea. Use this if you need to render a label with custom HTML. (EXPERIMENTAL)