Is there a way to catch all the label texts of a checked checkbox in Javascript (not JQuery).
My HTML is:
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-container">
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer" data-bc-answer-post="Firstitem">
<input id="post-3-0" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-checkbox" type="checkbox" name="posts_stijlen[]" value="670" checked="checked">
<label for="post-3-0" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-label">
<span class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-title">Firstitem</span>
</label>
</div>
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer" data-bc-answer-post="SecondItem">
<input id="post-3-8" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-checkbox" type="checkbox" name="posts_stijlen[]" value="681">
<label for="post-3-8" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-label">
<span class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-title">SecondItem</span>
</label>
</div>
</div>
I want to catch the label of the checked checkbox in Javascript in order to use it as Javascript Variable in Google Tagmanager.
Currently I've got this code (from www.simoahava.com) to catch the values of the checked checkboxes.
function () {
var inputs = document.querySelectorAll('.wpgu-onboarding-answer-containter input'),
selectedCheckboxes = [];
for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) {
if (inputs[i].type === "checkbox" && inputs[i].checked) {
selectedCheckboxes.push(inputs[i].value);
}
}
return selectedCheckboxes;
}
This script gives me all the values, but these are none-descriptive values. But I want the descriptive labels.
Is there a way to catch the text within the span with class .wpgu-onboarding-answer-title of all checked checkboxes ?
Thanks in Advance
Erik.
Apart from the previous solution, would like to share one more simple solution based on the code mentioned in the question. The solution can be as simple as fetching all the labels with class as wpgu-onboarding-answer-title and based on which input element is selected, fetch the respective label index and use it.
Please note that I have added an extra button for testing the function easily.
function abc() {
var labels = document.querySelectorAll('.wpgu-onboarding-answer-title');
var inputs = document.querySelectorAll('.wpgu-onboarding-answer-container input'),
selectedCheckboxes = [];
for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) {
if (inputs[i].type === "checkbox" && inputs[i].checked) {
selectedCheckboxes.push(labels[i].textContent);
//selectedCheckboxes.push(inputs[i].value);
}
}
console.log(selectedCheckboxes);
return selectedCheckboxes;
}
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-container">
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer" data-bc-answer-post="Firstitem">
<input id="post-3-0" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-checkbox" type="checkbox" name="posts_stijlen[]" value="670" checked="checked">
<label for="post-3-0" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-label">
<span class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-title">Firstitem</span>
</label>
</div>
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer" data-bc-answer-post="SecondItem">
<input id="post-3-8" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-checkbox" type="checkbox" name="posts_stijlen[]" value="681">
<label for="post-3-8" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-label">
<span class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-title">SecondItem</span>
</label>
</div>
</div>
<button onclick="abc()">
Fetch All Chkbox Values
</button>
Please note that this solution would only work if you have wpgu-onboarding-answer-title class being used for only this purpose and not anywhere else in the page before.
Based on this answer using jQuery, you can use an attribute selector and the ID of the element you want to get the label for, e.g. document.querySelector('label[for=' + button.id + ']'), then get its textContent to get the actual label:
document.querySelectorAll('input.wpgu-onboarding-answer-checkbox').forEach(input => {
console.log(input.id + ' ' +
document.querySelector('label[for=' + input.id + ']').textContent.trim() + ' ' +
(input.checked? '' : 'not ') + 'checked'
)
});
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-container">
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer" data-bc-answer-post="Firstitem">
<input id="post-3-0" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-checkbox" type="checkbox" name="posts_stijlen[]" value="670" checked="checked">
<label for="post-3-0" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-label">
<span class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-title">Firstitem</span>
</label>
</div>
<div class="wpgu-onboarding-answer" data-bc-answer-post="SecondItem">
<input id="post-3-8" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-checkbox" type="checkbox" name="posts_stijlen[]" value="681">
<label for="post-3-8" class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-label">
<span class="wpgu-onboarding-answer-title">SecondItem</span>
</label>
</div>
</div>
This could help you.
var inputs = document.querySelectorAll(".wpgu-onboarding-answer-container input:checked+label>span");
var checkbox = [];
inputs.forEach(input=>{
checkbox.push(input.textContent);
console.log(input.textContent)
});
Good lucky!
Related
Here is my Javascript code:
$('#sb_add_ctrl').click(function() {
var value = $('#sel_control_num').val();
for (var i = 1; i <= 5; i++) {
value = value.replace(/(\d+)$/, function(match, n) {
const nextValue = ++match;
return ('0' + nextValue).slice(1);
});
$('#parent')[0].innerHTML += '<br>' + value;
}
})
Here is my HTML code:
<div><label> Control Number </label>
<input name="get_control_num" style="text-transform:uppercase"
class="form-control" id="sel_control_num" readonly>
</div>
<div class="form-group">
<label> Quantity </label>
<input class="form-control" name="quantity" type="number"
/>
<br>
<button type="button" id="sb_add_ctrl" class="btn btn-primary"> Add
Control Number </button>
</div>
<div class="form-group" id="parent"></div>
What I want to do is get the existing class of the input and show the data that is in innerHTML into an input element .I can't think of a proper solution cause I am still a beginner in javascript/jquery, I tried the other methods in jquery but still it doesn't work thanks for the help
I have a div as follows:
<div class="questionholder" id="question5" style="display:none">
<div>
<h5>Select all that apply</h5>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementColor" name="ID1element" value="color"><label for="ID1elementColor"><p class="radioChoice">Color</p></label>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementHeight" name="ID1element" value="height"><label for="ID1elementHeight"><p class="radioChoice">Height</p></label>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementWeight" name="ID1element" value="weight"><label for="ID1elementWeight"><p class="radioChoice">Weight</p></label>
</div>
</div>
<div class="holdButtons">
<a class="text2button" onclick="displayquestion(6);">Next</a>
</div>
The user is expected to select all the checkboxes that apply to his situation. Let's assume he selects all 3.
When he clicks "Next", the function displayquestion(); will fire.
function displayquestion(a) {
var Elements = '';
var b = a - 1;
Elements = document.querySelector("#question" + b + " input[name=ID1element]").value;
}
Basically, the function is meant to store all the checked values into var Elements, which is meant to be an array.
However, I'm only getting the value of the first selected answer instead of an array of all selected answers.
How do I grab all the selected answers into an array?
No jQuery please.
Use querySelectorAll to get an array-like NodeList instead of querySelector, and then you can use Array.from to transform that NodeList into an array containing only the .value of the selected inputs:
function displayquestion(a) {
const b = a - 1;
const elements = Array.from(
document.querySelectorAll('#question' + b + ' input:checked'),
input => input.value
);
console.log(elements);
}
<div class="questionholder" id="question5">
<div>
<h5>Select all that apply</h5>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementColor" name="ID1element" value="color"><label for="ID1elementColor"><p class="radioChoice">Color</p></label>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementHeight" name="ID1element" value="height"><label for="ID1elementHeight"><p class="radioChoice">Height</p></label>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementWeight" name="ID1element" value="weight"><label for="ID1elementWeight"><p class="radioChoice">Weight</p></label>
</div>
</div>
<div class="holdButtons">
<a class="text2button" onclick="displayquestion(6);">Next</a>
</div>
Here is the script that you can use for that:
I haven't changed anything in your HTML structure. Except I have removed the display: none; from the style attribute of the class questionholder.
<script>
function displayquestion(b) {
let checkboxList = document.querySelectorAll("#question" + b + " input:checked");
let obj = [];
if (checkboxList.length > 0) { //Code works only if some checbox is checked
checkboxList.forEach(function(item) {
obj.push(item.value); //Contains the value of all the selected checkboxes.
});
}
console.log(obj); //array list containing all the selected values
}
</script>
<div class="questionholder" id="question5" style="">
<div>
<h5>Select all that apply</h5>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementColor" name="ID1element" value="color"><label for="ID1elementColor"><p class="radioChoice">Color</p></label>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementHeight" name="ID1element" value="height"><label for="ID1elementHeight"><p class="radioChoice">Height</p></label>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementWeight" name="ID1element" value="weight"><label for="ID1elementWeight"><p class="radioChoice">Weight</p></label>
</div>
</div>
<div class="holdButtons">
<a class="text2button" onclick="displayquestion(5);">Next</a>
</div>
Here is a JSFiddle link for that.
I hope this is helpful.
So first of I would make a variable for your
<a class="text2button">Next</a>. And I have removed the
onclick="displayquestion(6)" from your html.
Here is the variable.
var text2button = document.getElementsByClassName("text2button")[0];
text2button.addEventListener("click", displayquestion);
Here we have the function, so what I've done is.
I have created a variable var elements = []; Which is a empty array.
Then I create this variable var inputs = document.getElementsByClassName("input5");
This variable gets all the inputs with class input5.
Next I would loop through each of the inputs from the var inputs. Like this.
for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) {
if (inputs[i].checked) {
elements.push(inputs[i].value);
}
}
So what I do here is loop through each input for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) and then I check if any of the inputs are checked if (inputs[i].checked), then I push them to the array var elements with elements.push(inputs[i].value);.
And then I use console.log(elements); so show it in the console.
Check out the snippet below to see it in effect.
Hope this helps.
var text2button = document.getElementsByClassName("text2button")[0];
text2button.addEventListener("click", displayquestion);
function displayquestion() {
var elements = [];
var inputs = document.getElementsByClassName("input5");
for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) {
if (inputs[i].checked) {
elements.push(inputs[i].value);
}
}
console.log(elements);
}
<div class="questionholder" id="question5">
<div>
<h5>Select all that apply</h5>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementColor" name="ID1element" value="color"><label for="ID1elementColor"><p class="radioChoice">Color</p></label>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementHeight" name="ID1element" value="height"><label for="ID1elementHeight"><p class="radioChoice">Height</p></label>
<input class="input5" type="checkbox" id="ID1elementWeight" name="ID1element" value="weight"><label for="ID1elementWeight"><p class="radioChoice">Weight</p></label>
</div>
</div>
<div class="holdButtons">
<a class="text2button">Next</a>
</div>
I'm trying to calculate the %share which is simply an addition of share1+share2 == 100. However, I want it to work only on the two checked checkboxes.
How do I go about detecting the selected checkbox and apply the function accordingly?
var MAX = 2;
$('input.addnominee').click(function() {
($('input.addnominee:checked').length == MAX) ? $('input.addnominee').not(':checked').attr('disabled',true):$('input.addnominee').not(':checked').attr('disabled',false);
});
$("#share1").focusout(function() {
var share1 = $("#share1").val();
var answer = 100 - share1;
$("#share2").val(answer);
});
$("#share2").focusout(function() {
var share2 = $("#share2").val();
var answer = 100 - share2;
$("#share1").val(answer);
});
label {
display: block;
}
.block {
background-color: #eee;
padding: 15px;
margin-bottom: 5px;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.0.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<h6>You can choose a maximum of 2 users</h6>
<div class="block">
<label class="checkbox"> Add User
<input class="addnominee" type="checkbox" data-toggle="collapse" data-target="#fnominee">
</label>
<div class="form-group">
<input type="number" pattern="[0-9]*" id="share1" class="form-control" placeholder="% share" required>
</div>
</div>
<div class="block">
<label class="checkbox"> Add User
<input class="addnominee" type="checkbox" data-toggle="collapse" data-target="#fnominee">
</label>
<div class="form-group">
<input type="number" pattern="[0-9]*" id="share2" class="form-control" placeholder="% share" required>
</div>
</div>
<div class="block">
<label class="checkbox"> Add User
<input class="addnominee" type="checkbox" data-toggle="collapse" data-target="#fnominee">
</label>
<div class="form-group">
<input type="number" pattern="[0-9]*" id="share3" class="form-control" placeholder="% share" required>
</div>
</div>
<div class="block">
<label class="checkbox"> Add User
<input class="addnominee" type="checkbox" data-toggle="collapse" data-target="#fnominee">
</label>
<div class="form-group">
<input type="number" pattern="[0-9]*" id="share4" class="form-control" placeholder="% share" required>
</div>
</div>
Do you have a specific reason to use focusout?
You could catch the ID's of the two "selected" elements inside your checkbox function. Or to be precise, get id of input that is in the next div inside the clicked checkbox's parent:
var active1, active2;
var MAX = 2;
$('input.addnominee').click(function() {
($('input.addnominee:checked').length == MAX) ? $('input.addnominee').not(':checked').attr('disabled',true):$('input.addnominee').not(':checked').attr('disabled',false);
let checked = $('input.addnominee:checked');
active1 = $(checked[0]).parent().next('div').children('input').attr('id');
//Let's assign active2 only if we have multiple selected checkboxes:
if(checked.length > 1) active2 = $(checked[1]).parent().next('div').children('input').attr('id');
});
Here's example with click. To simplify it a bit, I added stepper class into every number input, and we're now detecting click for the class stepper:
$(document).on('click','.stepper',function(){
if($(this).attr('id') == active1){ //Check which one user clicked
if(active2 != undefined){ //Make the math only if we have another active element
var share1 = $('#'+active1).val();
var answer = 100 - share1;
$('#'+active2).val(answer);
}
}else if($(this).attr('id') == active2){
if(active1 != undefined){
var share2 = $('#'+active2).val();
var answer = 100 - share2;
$('#'+active1).val(answer);
}
}
});
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/xpvt214o/677733/
This surely works also with focusout, but you need to remember that clicking stepper wont focus the input, so it wouldn't be very functional.
And with this same idea you could also disable the inputs which are not 'active'.
I hope this helps!
EDIT:
Maybe a bit simplified version with the same idea:
jQuery(document).ready(function($) {
var MAX = 2;
$('input.addnominee').click(function() {
($('input.addnominee:checked').length == MAX) ? $('input.addnominee').not(':checked').attr('disabled',true):$('input.addnominee').not(':checked').attr('disabled',false);
});
$(document).on('click','.stepper',function(){
var checked = $('input.addnominee:checked');
if(checked.length > 1){
var active1 = $(checked[0]).parent().next('div').children('input');
var active2 = $(checked[1]).parent().next('div').children('input');
var share = $(this).val();
var answer = 100 - share;
if($(this).attr('id') == $(active1).attr('id')){
$(active2).val(answer);
}else if($(this).attr('id') == $(active2).attr('id')){
$(active1).val(answer);
}
}
});
});
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/128uzmj3/
I would like to enable the ability for someone to select one item within the first filter criteria, and then narrow down inside that criteria by choosing a secondary filter.
In this example, the first filter criteria is a date and the secondary filter set is for version numbers. So far I only have enabled this to select one criteria at a time and view it.
Any way to accomplish this, or would I need to rework the current code completely?
function addClassAll(el, cls) {
for (var i = 0; i < el.length; ++i) {
if (!el[i].className.match('(?:^|\\s)' + cls + '(?!\\S)')) {
el[i].className += ' ' + cls;
}
}
}
function delClassAll(el, cls) {
for (var i = 0; i < el.length; ++i) {
el[i].className = el[i].className.replace(new RegExp('(?:^|\\s)' + cls + '(?!\\S)'), '');
}
}
document.getElementById('filter-categories').onclick = function(evt) {
evt = evt || window.event;
var elem = evt.target || evt.srcElement;
var filter = (elem.id == 'filter-all') ? '' : '.' + elem.id;
var mask = document.querySelectorAll('#filter-mask');
addClassAll(mask, 'filter-mask');
setTimeout(function() {
delClassAll(document.querySelectorAll('.filter-item'), 'selected');
addClassAll(document.querySelectorAll('.filter-wrap'), 'filtered');
addClassAll(document.querySelectorAll('.filter-item' + filter), 'selected');
}, 500);
setTimeout(function() {
delClassAll(mask, 'filter-mask');
}, 1000);
}
.filtered .filter-item {
display: none
} /* filtered class applied via js */
.filtered .filter-item.selected {
display: block
} /* selected class applied via js */
<div class="page-content">
<span id="filter-categories">
<span class="filter-text">Feature Date:</span> <br>
<input type="radio" id="filter-all" class="filter-input" name="filter" checked /><label for="filter-all" class="filter-label">All</label>
<input type="radio" id="june" class="filter-input" name="filter" /><label for="june" class="filter-label">June</label>
<input type="radio" id="july" class="filter-input" name="filter" /><label for="july" class="filter-label">July</label>
<br><br>
<span class="filter-text">Release Number:</span> <br>
<input type="radio" id="one-one" class="filter-input" name="filter" /><label for="test" class="filter-label">1.1</label>
<input type="radio" id="one-two" class="filter-input" name="filter" /><label for="ninefour" class="filter-label">1.2</label>
<input type="radio" id="one-three" class="filter-input" name="filter" /><label for="ninefour" class="filter-label">1.3</label>
</span>
<div class="filter-wrap">
<div class="filter-item june one-one">
<h1>June release for version 1.1</h1>
</div>
<div class="filter-item june one-two">
<h1>Late June release for version 1.2</h1>
</div>
<div class="filter-item july one-two">
<h1>July release for version 1.2</h1>
</div>
<div class="filter-item july one-three">
<h1>July release for version 1.3</h1>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Suppose I have the following code which creates two radio buttons:
<li id="foli517" class=" ">
<label class="desc" id="shippingChoice" for="Field517_0">
Shipping Options
</label>
<div>
<input id="shippingChoice" name="Field517" type="hidden" value="" />
<span>
<input id="shipping1" name="Field517" type="radio" class="field radio" value="$2.00 Shipping Fee" tabindex="13" checked="checked" />
<label class="choice" for="Field517_0" >
$2.00 Shipping Fee</label>
</span>
<span>
<input id="Field517_1" name="Field517" type="radio" class="field radio" value="I will pick up the items (free shipping)" tabindex="14" />
<label class="choice" for="Field517_1" >
I will pick up the items (free shipping)</label>
</span>
</div>
</li>
How would I implement a javascript function onclick which updates the inner html of a span with id "mySpan" with the word "FREE" when the 2nd radio button is clicked, and "NOT FREE" otherwise?
document.getElementById(WHAT GOES HERE).onclick = function() {
//what goes here?
};
document.getElementById('foli517').onchange = function(e) {
var e = e || event;
var target = e.target || e.srcElement;
var span = document.getElementById('mySpan');
var span2 = document.getElementById('mySpan2');
if (target.type === "radio") {
span.innerHTML = (target.id === "Field517_1") ? "FREE" : "NOT FREE";
}
if (target.type === "checkbox") {
span2.innerHTML = "Is it checked? " + target.checked;
}
};
Example: http://jsfiddle.net/pEYnm/2/
I would add onclick="setSpan('FREE');" and onclick="setSpan('NOT FREE');" to HTML of the respective radio buttons then add a javascript function as below that sets the HTML of the span.
function setSpan(text) {
document.getElementById('mySpan').innerHTML = text;
}
Please check Working code of Radio button on click !