Input Color disabled Property
Example
Disable a color picker:
document.getElementById("myColor").disabled = true;
The result will be:
Definition and Usage
The disabled property sets or returns whether a color picker should be disabled, or not.
A disabled element is unusable and un-clickable. Disabled elements are usually rendered in gray by default in browsers.
This property reflects the HTML disabled attribute.
Browser Support
Property | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
disabled | Yes | 10.0 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Note: The <input type="color"> element does not show any colorpicker in Internet Explorer and Safari.
Syntax
Return the disabled property:
colorObject.disabled
Set the disabled property:
colorObject.disabled=true|false
Property Values
Value | Description |
---|---|
true|false |
Specifies whether a
color picker should be disabled or not
|
Technical Details
Return Value: | A Boolean, returns true if the color picker is disabled, otherwise it returns false |
---|
More Examples
Example
Find out if a color picker is disabled or not:
var x = document.getElementById("myColor").disabled;
The result of x will be:
true
Try it Yourself »
Example
Disable and undisable a color picker:
function disableBtn() {
document.getElementById("myColor").disabled = true;
}
function undisableBtn() {
document.getElementById("myColor").disabled = false;
}
Try it Yourself »
Related Pages
HTML reference: HTML <input> disabled attribute
Input Color Object