The cut
event is fired when the user has initiated a "cut" action through the browser's user interface.
If the user attempts a cut action on uneditable content, the cut
event still fires but the event object contains no data.
The event's default action is to copy the current selection (if any) to the system clipboard and remove it from the document.
A handler for this event can modify the clipboard contents by calling setData(format, data)
on the event's ClipboardEvent.clipboardData
property, and cancelling the default action using event.preventDefault()
.
Note though that cancelling the default action will also prevent the document from being updated. So an event handler which wants to emulate the default action for "cut" while modifying the clipboard must also manually remove the selection from the document.
The handler cannot read the clipboard data.
It's possible to construct and dispatch a synthetic cut
event, but this will not affect the system clipboard or the document's contents.
Syntax
Use the event name in methods like addEventListener()
, or set an event handler property.
addEventListener("cut", (event) => {});
oncut = (event) => {};
Event type
Examples
Live example
HTML
<div class="source" contenteditable="true">Cut text from this box.</div>
<div class="target" contenteditable="true">And paste it into this one.</div>
JavaScript
const source = document.querySelector("div.source");
source.addEventListener("cut", (event) => {
const selection = document.getSelection();
event.clipboardData.setData("text/plain", selection.toString().toUpperCase());
selection.deleteFromDocument();
event.preventDefault();
});
Result
Specifications
Browser compatibility
|
Desktop |
Mobile |
|
Chrome |
Edge |
Firefox |
Internet Explorer |
Opera |
Safari |
WebView Android |
Chrome Android |
Firefox for Android |
Opera Android |
Safari on IOS |
Samsung Internet |
cut_event |
1 |
12 |
22 |
9Before Internet Explorer 9, this event is not supported via addEventListener ; however, the event handler is supported since IE 5.5. The event can be listened to via element.oncopy .
|
≤12.1 |
3 |
4.4 |
18 |
22 |
≤12.1 |
3 |
1.0 |
See also