pub struct Select<'life> {Show 41 fields
pub accesskey: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub autocapitalize: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub autocomplete: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub autofocus: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub class: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub contenteditable: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub contextmenu: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub data: BTreeMap<&'life str, AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub dir: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub disabled: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub draggable: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub enterkeyhint: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub exportparts: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub extra: BTreeMap<&'life str, AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub form: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub hidden: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub id: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub inert: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub inputmode: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub is: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub itemid: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub itemprop: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub itemref: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub itemscope: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub itemtype: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub lang: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub multiple: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub name: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub nonce: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub part: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub popover: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub required: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub role: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub size: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub slot: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub spellcheck: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub style: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub tabindex: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub title: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub translate: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
pub virtualkeyboardpolicy: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>,
}
Expand description
The <select>
HTML element represents a control that provides a menu of options.
More information: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/select
Fields§
§accesskey: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Provides a hint for generating a keyboard shortcut for the current element. This attribute consists of a space-separated list of characters. The browser should use the first one that exists on the computer keyboard layout.
autocapitalize: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Controls whether and how text input is automatically capitalized as it is entered/edited by the user. It can have the following values:
off
ornone
, no autocapitalization is applied (all letters default to lowercase)on
orsentences
, the first letter of each sentence defaults to a capital letter; all other letters default to lowercasewords
, the first letter of each word defaults to a capital letter; all other letters default to lowercasecharacters
, all letters should default to uppercase
autocomplete: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
A string providing a hint for a user agent's autocomplete feature. See The HTML autocomplete attribute for a complete list of values and details on how to use autocomplete.
autofocus: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
This Boolean attribute lets you specify that a form control should have input focus when the page loads. Only one form element in a document can have the autofocus
attribute.
class: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
A space-separated list of the classes of the element. Classes allow CSS and JavaScript to select and access specific elements via the class selectors or functions like the method Document.getElementsByClassName()
.
contenteditable: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
An enumerated attribute indicating if the element should be editable by the user. If so, the browser modifies its widget to allow editing. The attribute must take one of the following values:
true
or the empty string, which indicates that the element must be editable;false
, which indicates that the element must not be editable.
data: BTreeMap<&'life str, AttributeValue<'life>>
Forms a class of attributes, called custom data attributes, that allow proprietary information to be exchanged between the HTML and its DOM representation that may be used by scripts. All such custom data are available via the HTMLElement
interface of the element the attribute is set on. The HTMLElement.dataset
property gives access to them.
dir: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
An enumerated attribute indicating the directionality of the element's text. It can have the following values:
ltr
, which means left to right and is to be used for languages that are written from the left to the right (like English);rtl
, which means right to left and is to be used for languages that are written from the right to the left (like Arabic);auto
, which lets the user agent decide. It uses a basic algorithm as it parses the characters inside the element until it finds a character with a strong directionality, then it applies that directionality to the whole element.
disabled: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
This Boolean attribute indicates that the user cannot interact with the control. If this attribute is not specified, the control inherits its setting from the containing element, for example <fieldset>
; if there is no containing element with the disabled
attribute set, then the control is enabled.
draggable: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
An enumerated attribute indicating whether the element can be dragged, using the Drag and Drop API. It can have the following values:
true
, which indicates that the element may be draggedfalse
, which indicates that the element may not be dragged.
enterkeyhint: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Hints what action label (or icon) to present for the enter key on virtual keyboards.
exportparts: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Used to transitively export shadow parts from a nested shadow tree into a containing light tree.
extra: BTreeMap<&'life str, AttributeValue<'life>>
/// Extra attributes of the element. This is a map of attribute names to their values, and the attribute names are in lowercase.
form: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
The <form>
element to associate the <select>
with (its form owner). The value of this attribute must be the id
of a <form>
in the same document. (If this attribute is not set, the <select>
is associated with its ancestor <form>
element, if any.)
This attribute lets you associate <select>
elements to <form>
s anywhere in the document, not just inside a <form>
. It can also override an ancestor <form>
element.
An enumerated attribute indicating that the element is not yet, or is no longer, relevant. For example, it can be used to hide elements of the page that can't be used until the login process has been completed. The browser won't render such elements. This attribute must not be used to hide content that could legitimately be shown.
id: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Defines a unique identifier (ID) which must be unique in the whole document. Its purpose is to identify the element when linking (using a fragment identifier), scripting, or styling (with CSS).
inert: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
A boolean value that makes the browser disregard user input events for the element. Useful when click events are present.
inputmode: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Provides a hint to browsers about the type of virtual keyboard configuration to use when editing this element or its contents. Used primarily on <input>
elements, but is usable on any element while in contenteditable
mode.
is: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Allows you to specify that a standard HTML element should behave like a registered custom built-in element (see Using custom elements for more details).
itemid: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
The unique, global identifier of an item.
itemprop: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Used to add properties to an item. Every HTML element may have an itemprop
attribute specified, where an itemprop
consists of a name and value pair.
itemref: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Properties that are not descendants of an element with the itemscope
attribute can be associated with the item using an itemref
. It provides a list of element ids (not itemid
s) with additional properties elsewhere in the document.
itemscope: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
itemscope
(usually) works along with itemtype
to specify that the HTML contained in a block is about a particular item. itemscope
creates the Item and defines the scope of the itemtype
associated with it. itemtype
is a valid URL of a vocabulary (such as schema.org) that describes the item and its properties context.
itemtype: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Specifies the URL of the vocabulary that will be used to define itemprop
s (item properties) in the data structure. itemscope
is used to set the scope of where in the data structure the vocabulary set by itemtype
will be active.
lang: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Helps define the language of an element: the language that non-editable elements are in, or the language that editable elements should be written in by the user. The attribute contains one "language tag" (made of hyphen-separated "language subtags") in the format defined in RFC 5646: Tags for Identifying Languages (also known as BCP 47). xml:lang has priority over it.
multiple: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
This Boolean attribute indicates that multiple options can be selected in the list. If it is not specified, then only one option can be selected at a time. When multiple
is specified, most browsers will show a scrolling list box instead of a single line dropdown.
name: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
This attribute is used to specify the name of the control.
nonce: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
A cryptographic nonce ("number used once") which can be used by Content Security Policy to determine whether or not a given fetch will be allowed to proceed.
part: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
A space-separated list of the part names of the element. Part names allows CSS to select and style specific elements in a shadow tree via the ::part
pseudo-element.
popover: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Specifies that the element should be treated like a popover. An element with the popover
attribute is hidden from the page unless it is opened by interacting with an invoking element that has popovertarget
, or via showPopover()
.
required: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
A Boolean attribute indicating that an option with a non-empty string value must be selected.
role: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Roles define the semantic meaning of content, allowing screen readers and other tools to present and support interaction with an object in a way that is consistent with user expectations of that type of object. roles
are added to HTML elements using role="role_type"
, where role_type
is the name of a role in the ARIA specification.
size: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
If the control is presented as a scrolling list box (e.g. when multiple
is specified), this attribute represents the number of rows in the list that should be visible at one time. Browsers are not required to present a select element as a scrolled list box. The default value is 0
.
Note: According to the HTML specification, the default value for size should be 1
; however, in practice, this has been found to break some websites, and no other browser currently does that, so Mozilla has opted to continue to return 0
for the time being with Firefox.
slot: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Assigns a slot in a shadow DOM shadow tree to an element: An element with a slot
attribute is assigned to the slot created by the <slot>
element whose name
attribute's value matches that slot
attribute's value.
spellcheck: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
An enumerated attribute defines whether the element may be checked for spelling errors. It may have the following values:
- empty string or
true
, which indicates that the element should be, if possible, checked for spelling errors; false
, which indicates that the element should not be checked for spelling errors.
style: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Contains CSS styling declarations to be applied to the element. Note that it is recommended for styles to be defined in a separate file or files. This attribute and the <style>
element have mainly the purpose of allowing for quick styling, for example for testing purposes.
tabindex: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
An integer attribute indicating if the element can take input focus (is focusable), if it should participate to sequential keyboard navigation, and if so, at what position. It can take several values:
- a negative value means that the element should be focusable, but should not be reachable via sequential keyboard navigation;
0
means that the element should be focusable and reachable via sequential keyboard navigation, but its relative order is defined by the platform convention;- a positive value means that the element should be focusable and reachable via sequential keyboard navigation; the order in which the elements are focused is the increasing value of the tabindex. If several elements share the same tabindex, their relative order follows their relative positions in the document.
title: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
Contains a text representing advisory information related to the element it belongs to. Such information can typically, but not necessarily, be presented to the user as a tooltip.
translate: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
An enumerated attribute that is used to specify whether an element's attribute values and the values of its Text
node children are to be translated when the page is localized, or whether to leave them unchanged. It can have the following values:
- empty string or
yes
, which indicates that the element will be translated. no
, which indicates that the element will not be translated.
virtualkeyboardpolicy: Option<AttributeValue<'life>>
An enumerated attribute used to control the on-screen virtual keyboard behavior on devices such as tablets, mobile phones, or other devices where a hardware keyboard may not be available for elements that also uses the contenteditable
attribute.
auto
or an empty string, which automatically shows the virtual keyboard when the element is focused or tapped.manual
, which decouples focus and tap on the element from the virtual keyboard's state.
Implementations§
source§impl<'life> Select<'life>
impl<'life> Select<'life>
sourcepub fn tag() -> &'static str
pub fn tag() -> &'static str
Get the tag name of the element. This is the same as the name of the struct, in kebab-case.
sourcepub fn set_attr(
&mut self,
name: &'life str,
value: impl Into<AttributeValue<'life>>
)
pub fn set_attr( &mut self, name: &'life str, value: impl Into<AttributeValue<'life>> )
Sets an attribute of the element.
This sets the attribute of the struct. If the attribute is not a known attribute, it is added to the extra
map.
If the alloc
feature is disabled, this function will silently fail.
Note
This only works when the attribute is lowercase.
Trait Implementations§
source§impl<'life> Ord for Select<'life>
impl<'life> Ord for Select<'life>
1.21.0 · source§fn max(self, other: Self) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
fn max(self, other: Self) -> Selfwhere Self: Sized,
source§impl<'life> PartialEq<Select<'life>> for Select<'life>
impl<'life> PartialEq<Select<'life>> for Select<'life>
source§impl<'life> PartialOrd<Select<'life>> for Select<'life>
impl<'life> PartialOrd<Select<'life>> for Select<'life>
1.0.0 · source§fn le(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
fn le(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more