While trying to conduct a cash transfer online yesterday, I ran into an interesting — and new (to me, anyway) — problem. In attempting to provide account and identity information I found myself unable to enter data into the very input form that was soliciting same. “Hmmm,” I wondered to myself, “Why is this not working?” So I decided to ask Copilot. It immediately informed me that things such as auto-fill. password managers, and related “conveniences” can step all over input fields inside certain web pages. The TL;DR diagnosis, put succinctly, is some Web extensions stymie input.
Copilot recommended that I open an incognito window, and try again. Guess what? That worked like a champ!
Why Web Extensions Stymie Input — In Some Cases
In my case it looked like a combination of Chrome auto-fill and the Norton Password Manager were conspiring against the input page to prevent it from seeing and handling my input as it should. As soon as I got those things out of the way, the input problems disappeared.
I’ve been building websites and writing about markup languages for over 30 years now, and this is the first time I’ve run into this phenom. Apparently I’ve been incredibly lucky, because it happens on a lot of websites, especially those built to handle multiple languages and character sets. It just so happens this particular gotcha never bit me until yesterday, when it bit hard (and drove me just a tad bonkers).
KISS Remains a Valuable Approach to New/Unfamiliar APIs
KISS is, of course, the acronym for “Keep It Simple, Stupid!” It’s a good approach to keep in mind when working with new and unfamiliar apps, user interfaces, and the code beneath those skins. By simplifying the text handling the browser performed when providing input, I allowed the target web page to do its job without lots of other stuff going on in the background.
A simple, straightforward text entry environment let the web page accept input straight from my keyboard, with no extra processing or data delivery. Apparently, that was just what it wanted or needed to get the job done.
Here in Windows-World, not stepping on yourself is often the key to a successful user experience. Once my browser got itself out of the way, the web page was able to take it from there. I’ll count that as an unqualified success, and an interesting learning experience.
