HTML attribute: dirname

The dirname attribute can be used on the <textarea> element and several <input> types and describes the directionality of the element's text content during form submission. The browser uses this attribute's value to determine whether text the user has entered is left-to-right or right-to-left oriented. When used, the element's text directionality value is included in form submission data along with the dirname attribute's value as the name of the field.

Usage notes

The dirname attribute can be used on any <textarea> element, or any <input> element with hidden, text, search, tel, url, email, password, submit, reset or button type.

The format of the submitted data is {dirname_value}={direction} where {dirname_value} is the value of the dirname attribute and {direction} is the directionality of the text. For example, if the user enters "Hello" in an element with the attributes name="comment" and dirname="comment-direction", the URL-encoded form submission data for GET requests will be comment=Hello&comment-direction=ltr. The directionality is one of the following:

rtl

The text entered by the user is in a right-to-left writing direction.

ltr

The text entered by the user is in a left-to-right writing direction.

If no text directionality is specified, the user agent will use the directionality of the parent element containing the form, and if that is not specified, the default directionality of the user agent.

Examples

Textarea element directionality

In this example, the dir="auto" attribute on the textarea element allows the text directionality to be determined automatically based on the text entered by the user:

html
<form method="get" action="https://www.example.com/submit">
  <textarea name="comment" dir="auto" dirname="comment-direction">سيب</textarea>
  <button type="submit">Send my greetings</button>
</form>

When the user submits the form, the user agent includes two fields, one called comment with the value "سيب", and one called comment-direction with the value "rtl". The URL-encoded submission body looks like this:

url
https://www.example.com/submit?comment=%D8%B3%D9%8A%D8%A8&comment-direction=rtl

Input element directionality

In this example, the dir="auto" attribute on the input element allows the text directionality to be determined automatically based on the text entered by the user:

html
<form method="get" action="https://www.example.com/submit">
  <input
    type="text"
    name="comment-input"
    dir="auto"
    dirname="comment-direction"
    value="Hello" />
  <button type="submit">Send my greetings</button>
</form>

When the user submits the form, the user agent includes two fields, one called comment-input with the value "Hello", and one called comment-direction with the value "ltr":

url
https://www.example.com/submit?comment-input=Hello&comment-direction=ltr

Inheriting directionality

The following <input> and <textarea> elements do not have a dir attribute, so they inherit the explicit directionality of their parent element, which is rtl:

html
<div dir="rtl">
  <form method="get" action="https://www.example.com/submit">
    <input
      type="text"
      name="user"
      dirname="user-direction"
      value="LTR Username" />
    <textarea name="comment" dirname="comment-direction">LTR Comment</textarea>
    <button type="submit">Post Comment</button>
  </form>
</div>

The URL-encoded submission body looks like this:

url
https://www.example.com/submit?user=LTR+Username&user-direction=rtl&comment=LTR+Comment&comment-direction=rtl

Specifications

Specification
HTML Standard
# attr-fe-dirname

Browser compatibility

html.elements.textarea.dirname

BCD tables only load in the browser

html.elements.input.dirname

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also