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Aaron Gustafson: Latest Posts

Can Your AI Pass the Accessibility Test? :: Aaron Gustafson Fixing Accessibility After the Fact Is Too Late :: Aaron Gustafson Easy Data-entry Verification with a Web Component :: Aaron Gustafson Visual Validation Feedback for Form Fields :: Aaron Gustafson Never Lose Form Progress Again :: Aaron Gustafson Accessibility Assistant for Figma v52 :: Aaron Gustafson Repeatable Form Fields Made Simple :: Aaron Gustafson A Production-Ready Web Component Starter Template :: Aaron Gustafson Fullscreen Video and Iframes Made Easy :: Aaron Gustafson Dynamic Datalist: Autocomplete from an API :: Aaron Gustafson Lazy Loading Images Based on Screen Size :: Aaron Gustafson Optimizing Your Codebase for AI Coding Agents :: Aaron Gustafson A Web Component for Conditionally Displaying Fields :: Aaron Gustafson Identifying Accessibility Data Gaps in CodeGen Models :: Aaron Gustafson Learning Web Design, 6th Edition is out! :: Aaron Gustafson Passing Your CSS Theme to `canvas` :: Aaron Gustafson Exploring AI’s Role in Accessibility :: Aaron Gustafson Complaining About Designers Fiddling with Figma Solves Nothing :: Aaron Gustafson On Diversity :: Aaron Gustafson A Web Component for Conditional Dependent Fields :: Aaron Gustafson On CrowdStrike, dependencies, and building robust products on the web :: Aaron Gustafson Requirement Rules for Checkboxes :: Aaron Gustafson Don’t Outsource Your Perspective to a LLM :: Aaron Gustafson One World, One Web, One Love :: Aaron Gustafson
A Web Component for Obfuscating Form Fields :: Aaron Gustafson
Aaron Gustafson · 2025-12-06 · via Aaron Gustafson: Latest Posts

We have the password reveal pattern for passwords, but what about other sensitive fields that need to be readable while editing and obfuscated while at rest? The form-obfuscator web component does exactly that.

Basic usage

Wrap any text field in the component and it will automatically obfuscate the value when the field loses focus:

<form-obfuscator>
  <label for="secret-key-1">What was your first pet’s name?</label>
  <input type="text" id="secret-key-1" name="secret-key-1" />
</form-obfuscator>

When users click into the field, they see the actual value. When they click away, it’s replaced with asterisks (*). The real value is preserved in a hidden field for form submission.

Custom obfuscation characters

If you don’t like asterisks, you can specify any character you like:

<form-obfuscator character="">
  <label for="account">Account Number</label>
  <input type="text" id="account" name="account" />
</form-obfuscator>

Or get creative:

<form-obfuscator character="🤐">
  <label for="ssn">Social Security Number</label>
  <input type="text" id="ssn" name="ssn" />
</form-obfuscator>

Pattern-based obfuscation

Sometimes you want to show part of the value while hiding the rest. The pattern attribute lets you specify which characters to keep visible:

<form-obfuscator pattern="\d{4}$">
  <label for="ssn">Social Security Number</label>
  <input type="text" id="ssn" name="ssn" />
</form-obfuscator>

This keeps the last four digits visible while replacing everything else with your obfuscation character. Perfect for Social Security Numbers, credit cards, or phone numbers where showing the last few digits helps users confirm they’ve entered the right value.

Limiting displayed characters

Use the maxlength attribute to cap how many characters appear when obfuscated:

<form-obfuscator maxlength="4">
  <label for="password">Password</label>
  <input type="text" id="password" name="password" />
</form-obfuscator>

Even if the user enters a 20-character value, only four asterisks will be displayed when the field is obfuscated. This prevents giving away information about the length of the information entered.

Custom replacement functions

For complete control, you can provide a JavaScript function via the replacer attribute:

<script>
  window.emailReplacer = function () {
    var username = arguments[0][1];
    var domain = arguments[0][2];
    return username.replace(/./g, "*") + domain;
  };
</script>

<form-obfuscator
  pattern="^(.*?)(@.+)$"
  replacer="return emailReplacer(arguments)"
>
  <label for="email">Email Address</label>
  <input type="text" id="email" name="email" value="user@example.com" />
</form-obfuscator>

This example uses a pattern to separate the username from the domain, then obfuscates only the username portion, leaving @example.com visible.

Here’s another practical example for credit cards:

<script>
  function cardNumberReplacer() {
    var beginning = arguments[0][1];
    var final_digits = arguments[0][2];
    return beginning.replace(/\d/g, "*") + final_digits;
  }
</script>

<form-obfuscator
  pattern="^((?:[\d]+\-)+)(\d+)$"
  replacer="return cardNumberReplacer(arguments)"
>
  <label for="cc">Credit Card</label>
  <input type="text" id="cc" name="cc" value="1234-5678-9012-3456" />
</form-obfuscator>

This displays as ****-****-****-3456, showing only the last group of digits.

Combining attributes

You can combine these attributes for sophisticated obfuscation patterns:

<form-obfuscator pattern="\d{4}$" character="" maxlength="16">
  <label for="card">Credit Card</label>
  <input type="text" id="card" name="card" />
</form-obfuscator>

This keeps the last 4 digits visible, uses bullets for obfuscation, and limits the display to 16 characters total.

Event handling

The component dispatches custom events when values are hidden or revealed:

const obfuscator = document.querySelector("form-obfuscator");

obfuscator.addEventListener("form-obfuscator:hide", (e) => {
  console.log("Field obfuscated:", e.detail.field.value);
});

obfuscator.addEventListener("form-obfuscator:reveal", (e) => {
  console.log("Field revealed:", e.detail.field.value);
});

You can access both the visible field and the hidden field through event.detail.field and event.detail.hidden respectively.

How it works

The component creates a hidden input field to store the actual value for form submission. When the visible field loses focus, it:

  1. Copies the current value to the hidden field
  2. Applies your obfuscation rules to create the display value
  3. Updates the visible field with the obfuscated value
  4. Dispatches the form-obfuscator:hide event

When the field gains focus, it:

  1. Restores the real value from the hidden field
  2. Updates the visible field
  3. Dispatches the form-obfuscator:reveal event

The source order ensures the hidden field is the one that gets submitted with the form.

Progressive enhancement

The component makes no assumptions about your markup—it works with any text-style input element. If JavaScript fails to load, the field behaves like a normal input, which is exactly what you want. Users can still enter and submit values; they just won’t get the obfuscation behavior.

Demo

I’ve created a comprehensive demo page showing the various configuration options over on GitHub:

Grab it

Check out the full project over on GitHub or install via npm:

npm install @aarongustafson/form-obfuscator

Import and use:

import "@aarongustafson/form-obfuscator";

No dependencies, just a straightforward way to add field obfuscation to your forms.