Hi @jasontipton
, thanks! 😁
The example was just for one input, there was only a document.querySelector() which returns one item. For handling multiple inputs you just need to select all of them with document.querySelectorAll() and apply handler on each of them.
I modified both examples to handle multiple items. 😊
@munkacsimark
found that the highlighted (--webkitProgressPercent) was not working in mobile (at least not in Chrome, I did not test the other mobile browsers). I was able to get it working though by adding to the JS.
Hi @jasontipton , thanks! 😁
The example was just for one input, there was only a
document.querySelector()
which returns one item. For handling multiple inputs you just need to select all of them withdocument.querySelectorAll()
and apply handler on each of them.I modified both examples to handle multiple items. 😊
@munkacsimark awesome solution! that makes sense, thank you!
@munkacsimark
found that the highlighted (--webkitProgressPercent) was not working in mobile (at least not in Chrome, I did not test the other mobile browsers). I was able to get it working though by adding to the JS.
Adding here in case anyone else needs it :)