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I just found that this question is tagged with and . According to their tag wikis, 1.7k questions are tagged with , while only 232 questions are tagged with .

Can we merge these tags? It seems rather redundant to have both.

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    Do we need either of them? Is there some keypress expert out there that isn't an expert in whatever the question is actually about?
    – davidism
    Jul 20, 2016 at 16:13
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    @davidism It's a user-event that commonly needs debugged. I think it's general enough to keep at least one of them. Jul 20, 2016 at 16:14

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onKeyPress is the native event handler for JavaScript, whereas keypress is part of jQuery's API and also used to indicate the event for a key being pressed in many languages.

I certainly don't think that we need to remove them, because there is some context included with the tag.

I also think that since keypress represents such a large group of language agnostic approaches to handling the event for a key press it should probably be the parent of these. Every function in a language's API does not need a tag, and that is probably the case here which is why having both tags is redundant.

As such, I would support merging the tag onKeyPress into keypress.

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    While I agree with your conclusion, some of your points aren't entirely accurate. onkeypress (no camel case) is the native property for the JavaScript event. keypress is the native event handler name in both native JavaScript (i.e. .addEventListener("keypress", function(evt) { ... })) and jQuery (i.e. $(...).on("keypress", function (evt) { ... })). Additionally, this is not a tag for a function in a specific language's API, this is a tag that represents the generic user event in any language that interacts with a GUI. Jul 20, 2016 at 19:17
  • @PatrickRoberts - "The onkeypress property sets and returns the onKeyPress event handler code for the current element." MDN (developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/GlobalEventHandlers/…). Note the use of camel case.
    – Travis J
    Jul 20, 2016 at 19:40
  • @PatrickRoberts - No language other than JavaScript specifically uses the name onKeyPress nor onkeypress to represent a key press event. So that tag was most likely created for JavaScript and is being misused due to a lack of description in other places. All the more reason to merge them as the keypress tag itself does represent a langauge agnostic event (as noted above in my answer).
    – Travis J
    Jul 20, 2016 at 19:42
  • Yes I see that onKeyPress is in use on MDN, but MDN is not the standard, W3C is. Nowhere in the W3C standard does it mention onKeyPress, and honestly, it doesn't mention onkeypress either, that's exclusively a DOM property as I said, not an event handler. That's the reason I suggested merging it with keypress, which is the official name. Jul 20, 2016 at 19:47
  • In the W3C HTML API, it does mention onkeypress, but again, not onKeyPress. Jul 20, 2016 at 19:52

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