Why We Removed Number Inputs | GOV.UK

The GOV.UK UX and design team are fascinating. Every time I've had to use the website I've found it a breeze, which is an enormous achievement on their behalf. Better yet, they're incredibly transparent and make a lot of their research and reasoning available.

Recently, they changed all numeric input fields (dates, phone numbers, age etc.) across the entire GOV.UK design system to use `<input type=”text” inputmode=”numeric” pattern="[0-9]*">` instead of `<input type="number">`. That almost sounds counter intuitive, given that their goal is to trigger the (very useful) numeric keypad on mobile devices, but their reasoning is pretty bulletproof.

  • Number inputs don't have great support across various screen readers and other accessibility software (which does seem a little odd to me but facts are facts);
  • Some browsers attempt to round large numbers, potentially into exponential notation (e.g. 1429327e+18) or just to the nearest 10;
  • Old version of Safari have, well, irritating traits like adding commas to numbers over a certain size; particularly unhelpful for credit card fields!
  • Scrolling can accidentally change numbers, which is an issue (I've felt that one personally).

Their proposed solution of using a `text` version with the numeric keypad specified solves pretty much all of these issues, and the `pattern` attribute polyfills in for older iOS devices and some other old browsers which may not understand `inputmode` that well. Neat.

Original source: Reddit

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