JS - Collecting data from one function to run in another [duplicate] - javascript

There seems to be lots of info on how to submit a form using javascript, but I am looking for a solution to capture when a form has been submitted and intercept it in javascript.
HTML
<form>
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
When a user presses the submit button, I do not want the form to be submitted, but instead I would like a JavaScript function to be called.
function captureForm() {
// do some stuff with the values in the form
// stop form from being submitted
}
A quick hack would be to add an onclick function to the button but I do not like this solution... there are many ways to submit a form... e.g. pressing return while on an input, which this does not account for.
Ty

<form id="my-form">
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
In JS:
function processForm(e) {
if (e.preventDefault) e.preventDefault();
/* do what you want with the form */
// You must return false to prevent the default form behavior
return false;
}
var form = document.getElementById('my-form');
if (form.attachEvent) {
form.attachEvent("submit", processForm);
} else {
form.addEventListener("submit", processForm);
}
Edit: in my opinion, this approach is better than setting the onSubmit attribute on the form since it maintains separation of mark-up and functionality. But that's just my two cents.
Edit2: Updated my example to include preventDefault()

You cannot attach events before the elements you attach them to has loaded
It is recommended to use eventListeners - here one when the page loads and another when the form is submitted
This works since IE9:
Plain/Vanilla JS
// Should only be triggered on first page load
console.log('ho');
window.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() {
document.getElementById('my-form').addEventListener("submit", function(e) {
e.preventDefault(); // before the code
/* do what you want with the form */
// Should be triggered on form submit
console.log('hi');
})
});
<form id="my-form">
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
jQuery
// Should only be triggered on first page load
console.log('ho');
$(function() {
$('#my-form').on("submit", function(e) {
e.preventDefault(); // cancel the actual submit
/* do what you want with the form */
// Should be triggered on form submit
console.log('hi');
});
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.6.0/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form id="my-form">
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
Not recommended but will work
If you do not need more than one event handler, you can use onload and onsubmit
// Should only be triggered on first page load
console.log('ho');
window.onload = function() {
document.getElementById('my-form').onsubmit = function() {
/* do what you want with the form */
// Should be triggered on form submit
console.log('hi');
// You must return false to prevent the default form behavior
return false;
}
}
<form id="my-form">
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>

<form onSubmit="return captureForm()">
that should do. Make sure that your captureForm() method returns false.

Another option to handle all requests I used in my practice for cases when onload can't help is to handle javascript submit, html submit, ajax requests.
These code should be added in the top of body element to create listener before any form rendered and submitted.
In example I set hidden field to any form on page on its submission even if it happens before page load.
//Handles jquery, dojo, etc. ajax requests
(function (send) {
var token = $("meta[name='_csrf']").attr("content");
var header = $("meta[name='_csrf_header']").attr("content");
XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send = function (data) {
if (isNotEmptyString(token) && isNotEmptyString(header)) {
this.setRequestHeader(header, token);
}
send.call(this, data);
};
})(XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send);
//Handles javascript submit
(function (submit) {
HTMLFormElement.prototype.submit = function (data) {
var token = $("meta[name='_csrf']").attr("content");
var paramName = $("meta[name='_csrf_parameterName']").attr("content");
$('<input>').attr({
type: 'hidden',
name: paramName,
value: token
}).appendTo(this);
submit.call(this, data);
};
})(HTMLFormElement.prototype.submit);
//Handles html submit
document.body.addEventListener('submit', function (event) {
var token = $("meta[name='_csrf']").attr("content");
var paramName = $("meta[name='_csrf_parameterName']").attr("content");
$('<input>').attr({
type: 'hidden',
name: paramName,
value: token
}).appendTo(event.target);
}, false);

Use #Kristian Antonsen's answer, or you can use:
$('button').click(function() {
preventDefault();
captureForm();
});

Related

How to pass clicked button value to javascript on form submit [duplicate]

I have a .submit() event set up for form submission. I also have multiple forms on the page, but just one here for this example. I'd like to know which submit button was clicked without applying a .click() event to each one.
Here's the setup:
<html>
<head>
<title>jQuery research: forms</title>
<script type='text/javascript' src='../jquery-1.5.2.min.js'></script>
<script type='text/javascript' language='javascript'>
$(document).ready(function(){
$('form[name="testform"]').submit( function(event){ process_form_submission(event); } );
});
function process_form_submission( event ) {
event.preventDefault();
//var target = $(event.target);
var me = event.currentTarget;
var data = me.data.value;
var which_button = '?'; // <-- this is what I want to know
alert( 'data: ' + data + ', button: ' + which_button );
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<h2>Here's my form:</h2>
<form action='nothing' method='post' name='testform'>
<input type='hidden' name='data' value='blahdatayadda' />
<input type='submit' name='name1' value='value1' />
<input type='submit' name='name2' value='value2' />
</form>
</body>
</html>
Live example on jsfiddle
Besides applying a .click() event on each button, is there a way to determine which submit button was clicked?
I asked this same question: How can I get the button that caused the submit from the form submit event?
I ended up coming up with this solution and it worked pretty well:
$(document).ready(function() {
$("form").submit(function() {
var val = $("input[type=submit][clicked=true]").val();
// DO WORK
});
$("form input[type=submit]").click(function() {
$("input[type=submit]", $(this).parents("form")).removeAttr("clicked");
$(this).attr("clicked", "true");
});
});
In your case with multiple forms you may need to tweak this a bit but it should still apply
I found that this worked.
$(document).ready(function() {
$( "form" ).submit(function () {
// Get the submit button element
var btn = $(this).find("input[type=submit]:focus" );
});
}
This works for me:
$("form").submit(function() {
// Print the value of the button that was clicked
console.log($(document.activeElement).val());
}
When the form is submitted:
document.activeElement will give you the submit button that was clicked.
document.activeElement.getAttribute('value') will give you that button's value.
Note that if the form is submitted by hitting the Enter key, then document.activeElement will be whichever form input that was focused at the time. If this wasn't a submit button then in this case it may be that there is no "button that was clicked."
There is a native property, submitter, on the SubmitEvent interface.
Standard Web API:
var btnClicked = event.submitter;
jQuery:
var btnClicked = event.originalEvent.submitter;
Here's the approach that seems cleaner for my purposes.
First, for any and all forms:
$('form').click(function(event) {
$(this).data('clicked',$(event.target))
});
When this click event is fired for a form, it simply records the originating target (available in the event object) to be accessed later. This is a pretty broad stroke, as it will fire for any click anywhere on the form. Optimization comments are welcome, but I suspect it will never cause noticeable issues.
Then, in $('form').submit(), you can inquire what was last clicked, with something like
if ($(this).data('clicked').is('[name=no_ajax]')) xhr.abort();
Wow, some solutions can get complicated! If you don't mind using a simple global, just take advantage of the fact that the input button click event fires first. One could further filter the $('input') selector for one of many forms by using $('#myForm input').
$(document).ready(function(){
var clkBtn = "";
$('input[type="submit"]').click(function(evt) {
clkBtn = evt.target.id;
});
$("#myForm").submit(function(evt) {
var btnID = clkBtn;
alert("form submitted; button id=" + btnID);
});
});
I have found the best solution is
$(document.activeElement).attr('id')
This not only works on inputs, but it also works on button tags.
Also it gets the id of the button.
Another possible solution is to add a hidden field in your form:
<input type="hidden" id="btaction"/>
Then in the ready function add functions to record what key was pressed:
$('form#myForm #btnSubmit').click(function() {
$('form#myForm #btaction').val(0);
});
$('form#myForm #btnSubmitAndSend').click(function() {
$('form#myForm #btaction').val(1);
});
$('form#myForm #btnDelete').click(function() {
$('form#myForm #btaction').val(2);
});
Now in the form submition handler read the hidden variable and decide based on it:
var act = $('form#myForm #btaction').val();
Building on what Stan and yann-h did but this one defaults to the first button. The beauty of this overall approach is that it picks up both the click and the enter key (even if the focus was not on the button. If you need to allow enter in the form, then just respond to this when a button is focused (i.e. Stan's answer). In my case, I wanted to allow enter to submit the form even if the user's current focus was on the text box.
I was also using a 'name' attribute rather than 'id' but this is the same approach.
var pressedButtonName =
typeof $(":input[type=submit]:focus")[0] === "undefined" ?
$(":input[type=submit]:first")[0].name :
$(":input[type=submit]:focus")[0].name;
This one worked for me
$('#Form').submit(function(){
var btn= $(this).find("input[type=submit]:focus").val();
alert('you have clicked '+ btn);
}
Here is my solution:
$('#form').submit(function(e){
console.log($('#'+e.originalEvent.submitter.id));
e.preventDefault();
});
If what you mean by not adding a .click event is that you don't want to have separate handlers for those events, you could handle all clicks (submits) in one function:
$(document).ready(function(){
$('input[type="submit"]').click( function(event){ process_form_submission(event); } );
});
function process_form_submission( event ) {
event.preventDefault();
//var target = $(event.target);
var input = $(event.currentTarget);
var which_button = event.currentTarget.value;
var data = input.parents("form")[0].data.value;
// var which_button = '?'; // <-- this is what I want to know
alert( 'data: ' + data + ', button: ' + which_button );
}
As I can't comment on the accepted answer, I bring here a modified version that should take into account elements that are outside the form (ie: attached to the form using the form attribute). This is for modern browser: http://caniuse.com/#feat=form-attribute . The closest('form') is used as a fallback for unsupported form attribute
$(document).on('click', '[type=submit]', function() {
var form = $(this).prop('form') || $(this).closest('form')[0];
$(form.elements).filter('[type=submit]').removeAttr('clicked')
$(this).attr('clicked', true);
});
$('form').on('submit', function() {
var submitter = $(this.elements).filter('[clicked]');
})
You can simply get the event object when you submit the form. From that, get the submitter object. As below:
$(".review-form").submit(function (e) {
e.preventDefault(); // avoid to execute the actual submit of the form.
let submitter_btn = $(e.originalEvent.submitter);
console.log(submitter_btn.attr("name"));
}
In case you want to send this form to the backend, you can create a new form element by new FormData() and set the key-value pair for which button was pressed, then access it in the backend. Something like this -
$(".review-form").submit(function (e) {
e.preventDefault(); // avoid to execute the actual submit of the form.
let form = $(this);
let newForm = new FormData($(form)[0]);
let submitter_btn = $(e.originalEvent.submitter);
console.log(submitter_btn.attr("name"));
if (submitter_btn.attr("name") == "approve_btn") {
newForm.set("action_for", submitter_btn.attr("name"));
} else if (submitter_btn.attr("name") == "reject_btn") {
newForm.set("action_for", submitter_btn.attr("name"));
} else {
console.log("there is some error!");
return;
}
}
I was basically trying to have a form where user can either approve or disapprove/ reject a product for further processes in a task.
My HTML form is something like this -
<form method="POST" action="{% url 'tasks:review-task' taskid=product.task_id.id %}"
class="review-form">
{% csrf_token %}
<input type="hidden" name="product_id" value="{{product.product_id}}" />
<input type="hidden" name="task_id" value="{{product.task_id_id}}" />
<button type="submit" name="approve_btn" class="btn btn-link" id="approve-btn">
<i class="fa fa-check" style="color: rgb(63, 245, 63);"></i>
</button>
<button type="submit" name="reject_btn" class="btn btn-link" id="reject-btn">
<i class="fa fa-times" style="color: red;"></i>
</button>
</form>
Let me know if you have any doubts.
Try this:
$(document).ready(function(){
$('form[name="testform"]').submit( function(event){
// This is the ID of the clicked button
var clicked_button_id = event.originalEvent.submitter.id;
});
});
$("form input[type=submit]").click(function() {
$("<input />")
.attr('type', 'hidden')
.attr('name', $(this).attr('name'))
.attr('value', $(this).attr('value'))
.appendTo(this)
});
add hidden field
For me, the best solutions was this:
$(form).submit(function(e){
// Get the button that was clicked
var submit = $(this.id).context.activeElement;
// You can get its name like this
alert(submit.name)
// You can get its attributes like this too
alert($(submit).attr('class'))
});
Working with this excellent answer, you can check the active element (the button), append a hidden input to the form, and optionally remove it at the end of the submit handler.
$('form.form-js').submit(function(event){
var frm = $(this);
var btn = $(document.activeElement);
if(
btn.length &&
frm.has(btn) &&
btn.is('button[type="submit"], input[type="submit"], input[type="image"]') &&
btn.is('[name]')
){
frm.append('<input type="hidden" id="form-js-temp" name="' + btn.attr('name') + '" value="' + btn.val() + '">');
}
// Handle the form submit here
$('#form-js-temp').remove();
});
Side note: I personally add the class form-js on all forms that are submitted via JavaScript.
Similar to Stan answer but :
if you have more than one button, you have to get only the
first button => [0]
if the form can be submitted with the enter key, you have to manage a default => myDefaultButtonId
$(document).on('submit', function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
var pressedButtonId =
typeof $(":input[type=submit]:focus")[0] === "undefined" ?
"myDefaultButtonId" :
$(":input[type=submit]:focus")[0].id;
...
}
This is the solution used by me and work very well:
// prevent enter key on some elements to prevent to submit the form
function stopRKey(evt) {
evt = (evt) ? evt : ((event) ? event : null);
var node = (evt.target) ? evt.target : ((evt.srcElement) ? evt.srcElement : null);
var alloved_enter_on_type = ['textarea'];
if ((evt.keyCode == 13) && ((node.id == "") || ($.inArray(node.type, alloved_enter_on_type) < 0))) {
return false;
}
}
$(document).ready(function() {
document.onkeypress = stopRKey;
// catch the id of submit button and store-it to the form
$("form").each(function() {
var that = $(this);
// define context and reference
/* for each of the submit-inputs - in each of the forms on
the page - assign click and keypress event */
$("input:submit,button", that).bind("click keypress", function(e) {
// store the id of the submit-input on it's enclosing form
that.data("callerid", this.id);
});
});
$("#form1").submit(function(e) {
var origin_id = $(e.target).data("callerid");
alert(origin_id);
e.preventDefault();
});
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form id="form1" name="form1" action="" method="post">
<input type="text" name="text1" />
<input type="submit" id="button1" value="Submit1" name="button1" />
<button type="submit" id="button2" name="button2">
Submit2
</button>
<input type="submit" id="button3" value="Submit3" name="button3" />
</form>
This works for me to get the active button
var val = document.activeElement.textContent;
It helped me https://stackoverflow.com/a/17805011/1029257
Form submited only after submit button was clicked.
var theBtn = $(':focus');
if(theBtn.is(':submit'))
{
// ....
return true;
}
return false;
I was able to use jQuery originalEvent.submitter on Chrome with an ASP.Net Core web app:
My .cshtml form:
<div class="form-group" id="buttons_grp">
<button type="submit" name="submitButton" value="Approve" class="btn btn-success">Approve</button>
<button type="submit" name="submitButton" value="Reject" class="btn btn-danger">Reject</button>
<button type="submit" name="submitButton" value="Save" class="btn btn-primary">Save</button>
...
The jQuery submit handler:
#section Scripts {
#{await Html.RenderPartialAsync("_ValidationScriptsPartial");}
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
...
// Ensure that we log an explanatory comment if "Reject"
$('#update_task_form').on('submit', function (e) {
let text = e.originalEvent.submitter.textContent;
if (text == "Reject") {
// Do stuff...
}
});
...
The jQuery Microsoft bundled with my ASP.Net Core environment is v3.3.1.
Let's say I have these "submit" buttons:
<button type="submit" name="submitButton" id="update" value="UpdateRecord" class="btn btn-primary">Update Record</button>
<button type="submit" name="submitButton" id="review_info" value="ReviewInfo" class="btn btn-warning sme_only">Review Info</button>
<button type="submit" name="submitButton" id="need_more_info" value="NeedMoreInfo" class="btn btn-warning sme_only">Need More Info</button>
And this "submit" event handler:
$('#my_form').on('submit', function (e) {
let x1 = $(this).find("input[type=submit]:focus");
let x2 = e.originalEvent.submitter.textContent;
Either expression works. If I click the first button, both "x1" and "x2" return Update Record.
I also made a solution, and it works quite well:
It uses jQuery and CSS
First, I made a quick CSS class, this can be embedded or in a seperate file.
<style type='text/css'>
.Clicked {
/*No Attributes*/
}
</style>
Next, On the click event of a button within the form,add the CSS class to the button. If the button already has the CSS class, remove it. (We don't want two CSS classes [Just in case]).
// Adds a CSS Class to the Button That Has Been Clicked.
$("form :input[type='submit']").click(function ()
{
if ($(this).hasClass("Clicked"))
{
$(this).removeClass("Clicked");
}
$(this).addClass("Clicked");
});
Now, test the button to see it has the CSS class, if the tested button doesn't have the CSS, then the other button will.
// On Form Submit
$("form").submit(function ()
{
// Test Which Button Has the Class
if ($("input[name='name1']").hasClass("Clicked"))
{
// Button 'name1' has been clicked.
}
else
{
// Button 'name2' has been clicked.
}
});
Hope this helps!
Cheers!
You can create input type="hidden" as holder for a button id information.
<input type="hidden" name="button" id="button">
<input type="submit" onClick="document.form_name.button.value = 1;" value="Do something" name="do_something">
In this case form passes value "1" (id of your button) on submit. This works if onClick occurs before submit (?), what I am not sure if it is always true.
A simple way to distinguish which <button> or <input type="button"...> is pressed, is by checking their 'id':
$("button").click(function() {
var id = $(this).attr('id');
...
});
Here is a sample, that uses this.form to get the correct form the submit is into, and data fields to store the last clicked/focused element. I also wrapped submit code inside a timeout to be sure click events happen before it is executed (some users reported in comments that on Chrome sometimes a click event is fired after a submit).
Works when navigating both with keys and with mouse/fingers without counting on browsers to send a click event on RETURN key (doesn't hurt though), I added an event handler for focus events for buttons and fields.
You might add buttons of type="submit" to the items that save themselves when clicked.
In the demo I set a red border to show the selected item and an alert that shows name and value/label.
Here is the FIDDLE
And here is the (same) code:
Javascript:
$("form").submit(function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
// Use this for rare/buggy cases when click event is sent after submit
setTimeout(function() {
var $this=$(this);
var lastFocus = $this.data("lastFocus");
var $defaultSubmit=null;
if(lastFocus) $defaultSubmit=$(lastFocus);
if(!$defaultSubmit || !$defaultSubmit.is("input[type=submit]")) {
// If for some reason we don't have a submit, find one (the first)
$defaultSubmit=$(this).find("input[type=submit]").first();
}
if($defaultSubmit) {
var submitName=$defaultSubmit.attr("name");
var submitLabel=$defaultSubmit.val();
// Just a demo, set hilite and alert
doSomethingWith($defaultSubmit);
setTimeout(function() {alert("Submitted "+submitName+": '"+submitLabel+"'")},1000);
} else {
// There were no submit in the form
}
}.bind(this),0);
});
$("form input").focus(function() {
$(this.form).data("lastFocus", this);
});
$("form input").click(function() {
$(this.form).data("lastFocus", this);
});
// Just a demo, setting hilite
function doSomethingWith($aSelectedEl) {
$aSelectedEl.css({"border":"4px solid red"});
setTimeout(function() { $aSelectedEl.removeAttr("style"); },1000);
}
DUMMY HTML:
<form>
<input type="text" name="testtextortexttest" value="Whatever you write, sir."/>
<input type="text" name="moretesttextormoretexttest" value="Whatever you write, again, sir."/>
<input type="submit" name="test1" value="Action 1"/>
<input type="submit" name="test2" value="Action 2"/>
<input type="submit" name="test3" value="Action 3"/>
<input type="submit" name="test4" value="Action 4"/>
<input type="submit" name="test5" value="Action 5"/>
</form>
DUMB CSS:
input {display:block}
I write this function that helps me
var PupulateFormData= function (elem) {
var arr = {};
$(elem).find("input[name],select[name],button[name]:focus,input[type='submit']:focus").each(function () {
arr[$(this).attr("name")] = $(this).val();
});
return arr;
};
and then Use
var data= PupulateFormData($("form"));

Javascript not inserting input

I've been trying to use stripe to accept payment and I've been trying to make a rough prototype for it from a guide I found but I can't seem to get it working. The new input named "stripeToken" never inserts after the submit. This causes my PHP script to never execute. I'm trying to understand why it never inserts. Here's the scripts:
Javascript: (In the head of page)
<script src="https://js.stripe.com/v2/"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
Stripe.setPublishableKey('mykeyishere');
</script>
<script>
// Event Listeners
$('#payment-form').on('submit', generateToken);
var generateToken = function (e) {
var form = $(this);
// No pressing the buy now button more than once
form.find('button').prop('disabled', true);
// Create the token, based on the form object
Stripe.create(form, stripeResponseHandler);
// Prevent the form from submitting
e.preventDefault();
};
</script>
HTML/Javascript: (Tried JS both in the head and in the form)
<form action="index.php" method="POST" id="payment-form">
<script>
var stripeResponseHandler = function (status, response) {
var form = $('#payment-form');
// Any validation errors?
if (response.error) {
// Show the user what they did wrong
form.find('.payment-errors').text(response.error.message);
// Make the submit clickable again
form.find('button').prop('disabled', false);
} else {
// Otherwise, we're good to go! Submit the form.
// Insert the unique token into the form
$('<input>', {
'type': 'hidden',
'name': 'stripeToken',
'value': response.id
}).appendTo(form);
// Call the native submit method on the form
// to keep the submission from being canceled
form.get(0).submit();
}
};</script>
<span class="payment-errors"></span>
<div class="row">
<label>
<span>Card Number</span>
<input type="text" data-stripe="number">
</label>
</div>
<div class="row">
<label>
<span>CVC</span>
<input type="text" data-stripe="cvc">
</label>
</div>
<div class="row">
<label>
<span>Expiration (MM/YYYY)</span>
<input type="text" data-stripe="exp-month">
</label>
<input type="text" data-stripe="exp-year">
</div>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
You should remove that script tag from inside the form and put it next to the other script tag.
also try wrapping your event binding in a document.ready
$(document).ready(function(){
$('#payment-form').on('submit', generateToken);
var stripeResponseHandler = function (status, response) {
var form = $('#payment-form');
// Any validation errors?
if (response.error) {
// Show the user what they did wrong
form.find('.payment-errors').text(response.error.message);
// Make the submit clickable again
form.find('button').prop('disabled', false);
} else {
// Otherwise, we're good to go! Submit the form.
// Insert the unique token into the form
$('<input>', {
'type': 'hidden',
'name': 'stripeToken',
'value': response.id
}).appendTo(form);
// Call the native submit method on the form
// to keep the submission from being canceled
form.get(0).submit();
}
};
var generateToken = function (e) {
var form = $(this);
// No pressing the buy now button more than once
form.find('button').prop('disabled', true);
// Create the token, based on the form object
Stripe.create(form, stripeResponseHandler);
// Prevent the form from submitting
e.preventDefault();
};
});
From what I can guess ( and its not a good guess), is that the #payment-form does not get bound correctly because the script is getting ran before the dom is ready?
Also another thing caught my eye. You have e.preventDefault() which stops the form from being submitted, but then you have a responsehandler. does that response handler get called? Is there some request that goes out to stripe and comes back?
Check in your network window and see if that is happening. The form only gets submitted in the form.get(0).submit(); part of the response handler, so after stripe completes.

Form - submit POST request to multiple iframes

I know that it is possible to submit POST request to an iframe by using target attribute.
Is there any way to submit POST request from one form to multiple iframes at the same time?
Both HTML and JS solutions are acceptable.
A Javascript solution would be your best bet.
<form id="form">
<input type="text" name="xyz" value="random data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
In JS, you would attach an event listener to your form when it is submitted. The listener would trigger a function that could send the form data to multiple targets:
var form = document.getElementById("form");
if(form.attachEvent) {
form.attachEvent("submit", submitForm);
} else {
form.addEventListener("submit", submitForm);
}
function submitForm(e) {
if(e.preventDefault) {
e.preventDefault();
}
this.target = "first_iframe";
this.submit();
var secondForm = this.cloneNode();
secondForm.target = "second_iframe";
secondForm.submit();
}

How can I run a script when 1 of my 2 submit buttons within 1 form is clicked?

Hi I have 2 submit buttons within one form. The script below works to help prevent empty fields from being submitted by sending an alert msg to the user. However I only need it to run with one of my two submit buttons is clicked. So in other words if one button a if clicked it would submit the form with or without blank fields, and the other button would run the script below and not allow the form to be submitted with blank fields. Any help is greatly appreciated, Thanks.
<script type="text/javascript">
$('form').on('submit', function () {
var thisForm = $(this);
var thisAlert = thisForm.data('alert');
var canSubmit = true;
thisForm.find('[data-alert]').each(function(i) {
var thisInput = $(this);
if ( !$.trim(thisInput.val()) ) {
thisAlert += '\n' + thisInput.data('alert');
canSubmit = false;
};
});
if( !canSubmit ) {
alert( thisAlert );
return false;
}
});
</script>
Instead of wiring up to the form submit event, wire up to the click event of the button that you want to validate with. Returning true from a click event will allow the submit to occur, and false will block it.
You have one form and two submit buttons which, by default, will both submit the form. To prevent one button from submitting, add a click handler that both prevents the default submit action and does whatever else you want that button to do.
HTML
<form id="form">
<input type="text" value="something" />
<input id="submit1" type="submit" value="send" />
<input id="submit2" type="submit" value="ignore" />
</form>
JavaScript
$('#submit2').on('click', function (event) {
event.preventDefault();
// Form will not be submitted
// Do whatever you need to do when this button is clicked
});
$('form').on('submit', function () {
var thisForm = $(this);
var thisAlert = thisForm.data('alert');
var canSubmit = true;
thisForm.find('[data-alert]').each(function(i) {
var thisInput = $(this);
if ( !$.trim(thisInput.val()) ) {
thisAlert += '\n' + thisInput.data('alert');
canSubmit = false;
};
});
if( !canSubmit ) {
alert( thisAlert );
return false;
}
});
Demo https://jsfiddle.net/BenjaminRay/dqqfLxav/
You may try adding the click event and adding classes to the submit buttons. So you know which button click will submit the form accordingly.
$('form button').click(function(){
if($(this).hasClass('.submit-without-validation')) {
$('form').submit();
}
if($(this).hasClass('.submit-with-validation')) {
//Do your validation and then submit
}
});
There are so many answered that you can use to achieve what you want. And you can try this one also. Here is some explanation. Basically, you need can use html5 data attribute to set the value to differentiate both button. When the button was clicked, you can check the value using condition as following code :
HTML
<form>
<input type="text" value="" id="name"/>
<input type="submit" class="btn_submit" value="Submit validate" data-valid="yes"/>
<input type="submit" class="btn_submit" value="Submit without validate" data-valid="no"/>
</form>
JS
$(document).on('click', '.btn_submit', function(e){
e.preventDefault();
var data_valid = $(this).data('valid');
if(data_valid == "yes")
{
// doing your stuff here for validation like example below
var input = $('#name').val();
if(input=="")
{
alert('required');
return;
}
// After the validation process finish, submit the form
$('form').submit();
}
else
{
// submit without validation
$('form').submit();
}
});

Intercept a form submit in JavaScript and prevent normal submission

There seems to be lots of info on how to submit a form using javascript, but I am looking for a solution to capture when a form has been submitted and intercept it in javascript.
HTML
<form>
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
When a user presses the submit button, I do not want the form to be submitted, but instead I would like a JavaScript function to be called.
function captureForm() {
// do some stuff with the values in the form
// stop form from being submitted
}
A quick hack would be to add an onclick function to the button but I do not like this solution... there are many ways to submit a form... e.g. pressing return while on an input, which this does not account for.
Ty
<form id="my-form">
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
In JS:
function processForm(e) {
if (e.preventDefault) e.preventDefault();
/* do what you want with the form */
// You must return false to prevent the default form behavior
return false;
}
var form = document.getElementById('my-form');
if (form.attachEvent) {
form.attachEvent("submit", processForm);
} else {
form.addEventListener("submit", processForm);
}
Edit: in my opinion, this approach is better than setting the onSubmit attribute on the form since it maintains separation of mark-up and functionality. But that's just my two cents.
Edit2: Updated my example to include preventDefault()
You cannot attach events before the elements you attach them to has loaded
It is recommended to use eventListeners - here one when the page loads and another when the form is submitted
This works since IE9:
Plain/Vanilla JS
// Should only be triggered on first page load
console.log('ho');
window.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() {
document.getElementById('my-form').addEventListener("submit", function(e) {
e.preventDefault(); // before the code
/* do what you want with the form */
// Should be triggered on form submit
console.log('hi');
})
});
<form id="my-form">
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
jQuery
// Should only be triggered on first page load
console.log('ho');
$(function() {
$('#my-form').on("submit", function(e) {
e.preventDefault(); // cancel the actual submit
/* do what you want with the form */
// Should be triggered on form submit
console.log('hi');
});
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.6.0/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form id="my-form">
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
Not recommended but will work
If you do not need more than one event handler, you can use onload and onsubmit
// Should only be triggered on first page load
console.log('ho');
window.onload = function() {
document.getElementById('my-form').onsubmit = function() {
/* do what you want with the form */
// Should be triggered on form submit
console.log('hi');
// You must return false to prevent the default form behavior
return false;
}
}
<form id="my-form">
<input type="text" name="in" value="some data" />
<button type="submit">Go</button>
</form>
<form onSubmit="return captureForm()">
that should do. Make sure that your captureForm() method returns false.
Another option to handle all requests I used in my practice for cases when onload can't help is to handle javascript submit, html submit, ajax requests.
These code should be added in the top of body element to create listener before any form rendered and submitted.
In example I set hidden field to any form on page on its submission even if it happens before page load.
//Handles jquery, dojo, etc. ajax requests
(function (send) {
var token = $("meta[name='_csrf']").attr("content");
var header = $("meta[name='_csrf_header']").attr("content");
XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send = function (data) {
if (isNotEmptyString(token) && isNotEmptyString(header)) {
this.setRequestHeader(header, token);
}
send.call(this, data);
};
})(XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send);
//Handles javascript submit
(function (submit) {
HTMLFormElement.prototype.submit = function (data) {
var token = $("meta[name='_csrf']").attr("content");
var paramName = $("meta[name='_csrf_parameterName']").attr("content");
$('<input>').attr({
type: 'hidden',
name: paramName,
value: token
}).appendTo(this);
submit.call(this, data);
};
})(HTMLFormElement.prototype.submit);
//Handles html submit
document.body.addEventListener('submit', function (event) {
var token = $("meta[name='_csrf']").attr("content");
var paramName = $("meta[name='_csrf_parameterName']").attr("content");
$('<input>').attr({
type: 'hidden',
name: paramName,
value: token
}).appendTo(event.target);
}, false);
Use #Kristian Antonsen's answer, or you can use:
$('button').click(function() {
preventDefault();
captureForm();
});

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