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user17726418
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What is the scope of the keydown"keydown" and onkeydown"onkeydown" tags? Web? Any platform?

The name of the and tags sounds very much like a direct reference to web APIs, namely keydown from DOM UI Events and onkeydown from HTML (both attribute and property). However, the blurb for each of these events doesn’t specifically mention web or anything else.

I saw applied to this winforms question. That would make sense if these tags referred to a platform-independent general concept of an event which happens prior to "keyup", which might be called "keydown" or "KeyDown", or even onKeyPress (since a single event there has properties allowing it to respond to the down, repeat, and up phases). However, it would not make sense if this tag were a direct reference to Web APIs.

Which is it? Can these tags’ descriptions be clarified somehow?

What is the scope of the keydown and onkeydown tags? Web? Any platform?

The name of the and tags sounds very much like a direct reference to web APIs, namely keydown from DOM UI Events and onkeydown from HTML (both attribute and property). However, the blurb for each of these events doesn’t specifically mention web or anything else.

I saw applied to this winforms question. That would make sense if these tags referred to a platform-independent general concept of an event which happens prior to "keyup" which might be called "keydown" or "KeyDown" or even onKeyPress (since a single event there has properties allowing it to respond to the down, repeat, and up phases). However, it would not make sense if this tag were a direct reference to Web APIs.

Which is it? Can these tags’ descriptions be clarified somehow?

What is the scope of the "keydown" and "onkeydown" tags? Web? Any platform?

The name of the and tags sounds very much like a direct reference to web APIs, namely keydown from DOM UI Events and onkeydown from HTML (both attribute and property). However, the blurb for each of these events doesn’t specifically mention web or anything else.

I saw applied to this winforms question. That would make sense if these tags referred to a platform-independent general concept of an event which happens prior to "keyup", which might be called "keydown" or "KeyDown", or even onKeyPress (since a single event there has properties allowing it to respond to the down, repeat, and up phases). However, it would not make sense if this tag were a direct reference to Web APIs.

Which is it? Can these tags’ descriptions be clarified somehow?

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VLAZ
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The name of the keydown and onkeydown tags sounds very much like a direct reference to web APIs, namely keydown from DOM UI Events and onkeydown from HTML (both attribute and property). However, the blurb for each of these events doesn’t specifically mention web or anything else.

I saw keydown applied to this winforms question. That would make sense if these tags referred to a platform-independent general concept of an event which happens prior to keyup"keyup" which might be called keydown"keydown" or KeyDown"KeyDown" or even onKeyPress (since a single event there has properties allowing it to respond to the down, repeat, and up phases). However, it would not make sense if this tag were a direct reference to Web APIs.

Which is it? Can these tags’ descriptions be clarified somehow?

The name of the keydown and onkeydown tags sounds very much like a direct reference to web APIs, namely keydown from DOM UI Events and onkeydown from HTML (both attribute and property). However, the blurb for each of these events doesn’t specifically mention web or anything else.

I saw keydown applied to this winforms question. That would make sense if these tags referred to a platform-independent general concept of an event which happens prior to keyup which might be called keydown or KeyDown or even onKeyPress (since a single event there has properties allowing it to respond to the down, repeat, and up phases). However, it would not make sense if this tag were a direct reference to Web APIs.

Which is it? Can these tags’ descriptions be clarified somehow?

The name of the and tags sounds very much like a direct reference to web APIs, namely keydown from DOM UI Events and onkeydown from HTML (both attribute and property). However, the blurb for each of these events doesn’t specifically mention web or anything else.

I saw applied to this winforms question. That would make sense if these tags referred to a platform-independent general concept of an event which happens prior to "keyup" which might be called "keydown" or "KeyDown" or even onKeyPress (since a single event there has properties allowing it to respond to the down, repeat, and up phases). However, it would not make sense if this tag were a direct reference to Web APIs.

Which is it? Can these tags’ descriptions be clarified somehow?

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binki
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What is the scope of the keydown and onkeydown tags? Web? Any platform?

The name of the keydown and onkeydown tags sounds very much like a direct reference to web APIs, namely keydown from DOM UI Events and onkeydown from HTML (both attribute and property). However, the blurb for each of these events doesn’t specifically mention web or anything else.

I saw keydown applied to this winforms question. That would make sense if these tags referred to a platform-independent general concept of an event which happens prior to keyup which might be called keydown or KeyDown or even onKeyPress (since a single event there has properties allowing it to respond to the down, repeat, and up phases). However, it would not make sense if this tag were a direct reference to Web APIs.

Which is it? Can these tags’ descriptions be clarified somehow?