Prevent form inside a form from being submitted - javascript

I'm creating a huge form wizard with many input fields. The fields are inside sections that have display: none; and by clicking a button I'm walking through the sections and at the end I'm submitting the form. Inside one section there is another form to upload an image via ajax. To use ajax I need to prevent the form from being submitted with event.preventDefault();
But this causes submitting the parental form. How can I prevent the parental form from being submitted, too? The html structure looks like this:
<form action="" id="wizard">
<section id="sec1"></section>
<section id="sec2">
<form id="ajaxform">
<input type="file" id="ajaxfile">
<input type="submit" value="upload">
</form>
</section>
<section id="sec3"></section>
<button type="button">Back</button>
<button type="button">Next</button>
</form>
The jQuery looks like this:
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#ajaxform').submit(function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
$.ajax({stuff...});
});
});

event.preventDefault() prevents the default behaviour of the event but does not stop it from bubbling up to other elements. Use event.stopPropagation():
Prevents further propagation of the current event in the capturing and
bubbling phases.
Forms should not be nested. The behaviour of such invalid markup is not specified. You should fix the markup.
If, for some reason, you cannot alter the markup then you could use the submit event for the outer form and check for the presence of some value(s) to allow, or disallow, the submission. For example, have a hidden value in the last section that you only change when they reach the section (when it is shown).

Related

Why is my button function not being called? [duplicate]

I have a form in Angular that has two buttons tags in it. One button submits the form on ng-click. The other button is purely for navigation using ng-click. However, when this second button is clicked, AngularJS is causing a page refresh which triggers a 404. I’ve dropped a breakpoint in the function and it is triggering my function. If I do any of the following, it stops:
If I remove the ng-click, the button doesn’t cause a page refresh.
If I comment out the code in the function, it doesn’t cause a page refresh.
If I change the button tag to an anchor tag (<a>) with href="", then it doesn’t cause a refresh.
The latter seems like the simplest workaround, but why is AngularJS even running any code after my function that causes the page to reload? Seems like a bug.
Here is the form:
<form class="form-horizontal" name="myProfile" ng-switch-when="profile">
<fieldset>
<div class="control-group">
<label class="control-label" for="passwordButton">Password</label>
<div class="controls">
<button id="passwordButton" class="secondaryButton" ng-click="showChangePassword()">Change</button>
</div>
</div>
<div class="buttonBar">
<button id="saveProfileButton" class="primaryButton" ng-click="saveUser()">Save</button>
</div>
</fieldset>
</form>
Here is the controller method:
$scope.showChangePassword = function() {
$scope.selectedLink = "changePassword";
};
If you have a look at the W3C specification, it would seem like the obvious thing to try is to mark your button elements with type='button' when you don't want them to submit.
The thing to note in particular is where it says
A button element with no type attribute specified represents the same thing as a button element with its type attribute set to "submit"
You can try to prevent default handler:
html:
<button ng-click="saveUser($event)">
js:
$scope.saveUser = function (event) {
event.preventDefault();
// your code
}
You should declare the attribute ng-submit={expression} in your <form> tag.
From the ngSubmit docs
http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.directive:ngSubmit
Enables binding angular expressions to onsubmit events.
Additionally it prevents the default action (which for form means sending the request to the server and reloading the current page).
I use directive to prevent default behaviour:
module.directive('preventDefault', function() {
return function(scope, element, attrs) {
angular.element(element).bind('click', function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
event.stopPropagation();
});
}
});
And then, in html:
<button class="secondaryButton" prevent-default>Secondary action</button>
This directive can also be used with <a> and all other tags
You can keep <button type="submit">, but must remove the attribute action="" of <form>.
I wonder why nobody proposed the possibly simplest solution:
don't use a <form>
A <whatever ng-form> does IMHO a better job and without an HTML form, there's nothing to be submitted by the browser itself. Which is exactly the right behavior when using angular.
Add action to your form.
<form action="#">
This answer may not be directly related to the question. It's just for the case when you submit the form using scripts.
According to ng-submit code
var handleFormSubmission = function(event) {
scope.$apply(function() {
controller.$commitViewValue();
controller.$setSubmitted();
});
event.preventDefault();
};
formElement[0].addEventListener('submit', handleFormSubmission);
It adds submit event listener on the form.
But submit event handler wouldn't be called when submit is initiated by calling form.submit(). In this case, ng-submit will not prevent the default action, you have to call preventDefault yourself in ng-submit handler;
To provide a reasonably definitive answer, the HTML Form Submission Algorithm item 5 states that a form only dispatches a submit event if it was not submitted by calling the submit method (which means it only dispatches a submit event if submitted by a button or other implicit method, e.g. pressing enter while focus is on an input type text element).
See Form submitted using submit() from a link cannot be caught by onsubmit handler
I also had the same problem, but gladelly I fixed this by changing the type like from type="submit" to type="button" and it worked.
First Button submits the form and second does not
<body>
<form ng-app="myApp" ng-controller="myCtrl" ng-submit="Sub()">
<div>
S:<input type="text" ng-model="v"><br>
<br>
<button>Submit</button>
//Dont Submit
<button type='button' ng-click="Dont()">Dont Submit</button>
</div>
</form>
<script>
var app = angular.module('myApp', []);
app.controller('myCtrl', function($scope) {
$scope.Sub=function()
{
alert('Inside Submit');
}
$scope.Dont=function()
{
$scope.v=0;
}
});
</script>
</body>
Just add the FormsModule in the imports array of app.module.ts file,
and add import { FormsModule } from '#angular/forms'; at the top of this file...this will work.

I cant get my JSON from api with fetch in html [duplicate]

I have a form in Angular that has two buttons tags in it. One button submits the form on ng-click. The other button is purely for navigation using ng-click. However, when this second button is clicked, AngularJS is causing a page refresh which triggers a 404. I’ve dropped a breakpoint in the function and it is triggering my function. If I do any of the following, it stops:
If I remove the ng-click, the button doesn’t cause a page refresh.
If I comment out the code in the function, it doesn’t cause a page refresh.
If I change the button tag to an anchor tag (<a>) with href="", then it doesn’t cause a refresh.
The latter seems like the simplest workaround, but why is AngularJS even running any code after my function that causes the page to reload? Seems like a bug.
Here is the form:
<form class="form-horizontal" name="myProfile" ng-switch-when="profile">
<fieldset>
<div class="control-group">
<label class="control-label" for="passwordButton">Password</label>
<div class="controls">
<button id="passwordButton" class="secondaryButton" ng-click="showChangePassword()">Change</button>
</div>
</div>
<div class="buttonBar">
<button id="saveProfileButton" class="primaryButton" ng-click="saveUser()">Save</button>
</div>
</fieldset>
</form>
Here is the controller method:
$scope.showChangePassword = function() {
$scope.selectedLink = "changePassword";
};
If you have a look at the W3C specification, it would seem like the obvious thing to try is to mark your button elements with type='button' when you don't want them to submit.
The thing to note in particular is where it says
A button element with no type attribute specified represents the same thing as a button element with its type attribute set to "submit"
You can try to prevent default handler:
html:
<button ng-click="saveUser($event)">
js:
$scope.saveUser = function (event) {
event.preventDefault();
// your code
}
You should declare the attribute ng-submit={expression} in your <form> tag.
From the ngSubmit docs
http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.directive:ngSubmit
Enables binding angular expressions to onsubmit events.
Additionally it prevents the default action (which for form means sending the request to the server and reloading the current page).
I use directive to prevent default behaviour:
module.directive('preventDefault', function() {
return function(scope, element, attrs) {
angular.element(element).bind('click', function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
event.stopPropagation();
});
}
});
And then, in html:
<button class="secondaryButton" prevent-default>Secondary action</button>
This directive can also be used with <a> and all other tags
You can keep <button type="submit">, but must remove the attribute action="" of <form>.
I wonder why nobody proposed the possibly simplest solution:
don't use a <form>
A <whatever ng-form> does IMHO a better job and without an HTML form, there's nothing to be submitted by the browser itself. Which is exactly the right behavior when using angular.
Add action to your form.
<form action="#">
This answer may not be directly related to the question. It's just for the case when you submit the form using scripts.
According to ng-submit code
var handleFormSubmission = function(event) {
scope.$apply(function() {
controller.$commitViewValue();
controller.$setSubmitted();
});
event.preventDefault();
};
formElement[0].addEventListener('submit', handleFormSubmission);
It adds submit event listener on the form.
But submit event handler wouldn't be called when submit is initiated by calling form.submit(). In this case, ng-submit will not prevent the default action, you have to call preventDefault yourself in ng-submit handler;
To provide a reasonably definitive answer, the HTML Form Submission Algorithm item 5 states that a form only dispatches a submit event if it was not submitted by calling the submit method (which means it only dispatches a submit event if submitted by a button or other implicit method, e.g. pressing enter while focus is on an input type text element).
See Form submitted using submit() from a link cannot be caught by onsubmit handler
I also had the same problem, but gladelly I fixed this by changing the type like from type="submit" to type="button" and it worked.
First Button submits the form and second does not
<body>
<form ng-app="myApp" ng-controller="myCtrl" ng-submit="Sub()">
<div>
S:<input type="text" ng-model="v"><br>
<br>
<button>Submit</button>
//Dont Submit
<button type='button' ng-click="Dont()">Dont Submit</button>
</div>
</form>
<script>
var app = angular.module('myApp', []);
app.controller('myCtrl', function($scope) {
$scope.Sub=function()
{
alert('Inside Submit');
}
$scope.Dont=function()
{
$scope.v=0;
}
});
</script>
</body>
Just add the FormsModule in the imports array of app.module.ts file,
and add import { FormsModule } from '#angular/forms'; at the top of this file...this will work.

Contact form with AJAX call still redirecting after submit [duplicate]

I have a form in Angular that has two buttons tags in it. One button submits the form on ng-click. The other button is purely for navigation using ng-click. However, when this second button is clicked, AngularJS is causing a page refresh which triggers a 404. I’ve dropped a breakpoint in the function and it is triggering my function. If I do any of the following, it stops:
If I remove the ng-click, the button doesn’t cause a page refresh.
If I comment out the code in the function, it doesn’t cause a page refresh.
If I change the button tag to an anchor tag (<a>) with href="", then it doesn’t cause a refresh.
The latter seems like the simplest workaround, but why is AngularJS even running any code after my function that causes the page to reload? Seems like a bug.
Here is the form:
<form class="form-horizontal" name="myProfile" ng-switch-when="profile">
<fieldset>
<div class="control-group">
<label class="control-label" for="passwordButton">Password</label>
<div class="controls">
<button id="passwordButton" class="secondaryButton" ng-click="showChangePassword()">Change</button>
</div>
</div>
<div class="buttonBar">
<button id="saveProfileButton" class="primaryButton" ng-click="saveUser()">Save</button>
</div>
</fieldset>
</form>
Here is the controller method:
$scope.showChangePassword = function() {
$scope.selectedLink = "changePassword";
};
If you have a look at the W3C specification, it would seem like the obvious thing to try is to mark your button elements with type='button' when you don't want them to submit.
The thing to note in particular is where it says
A button element with no type attribute specified represents the same thing as a button element with its type attribute set to "submit"
You can try to prevent default handler:
html:
<button ng-click="saveUser($event)">
js:
$scope.saveUser = function (event) {
event.preventDefault();
// your code
}
You should declare the attribute ng-submit={expression} in your <form> tag.
From the ngSubmit docs
http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.directive:ngSubmit
Enables binding angular expressions to onsubmit events.
Additionally it prevents the default action (which for form means sending the request to the server and reloading the current page).
I use directive to prevent default behaviour:
module.directive('preventDefault', function() {
return function(scope, element, attrs) {
angular.element(element).bind('click', function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
event.stopPropagation();
});
}
});
And then, in html:
<button class="secondaryButton" prevent-default>Secondary action</button>
This directive can also be used with <a> and all other tags
You can keep <button type="submit">, but must remove the attribute action="" of <form>.
I wonder why nobody proposed the possibly simplest solution:
don't use a <form>
A <whatever ng-form> does IMHO a better job and without an HTML form, there's nothing to be submitted by the browser itself. Which is exactly the right behavior when using angular.
Add action to your form.
<form action="#">
This answer may not be directly related to the question. It's just for the case when you submit the form using scripts.
According to ng-submit code
var handleFormSubmission = function(event) {
scope.$apply(function() {
controller.$commitViewValue();
controller.$setSubmitted();
});
event.preventDefault();
};
formElement[0].addEventListener('submit', handleFormSubmission);
It adds submit event listener on the form.
But submit event handler wouldn't be called when submit is initiated by calling form.submit(). In this case, ng-submit will not prevent the default action, you have to call preventDefault yourself in ng-submit handler;
To provide a reasonably definitive answer, the HTML Form Submission Algorithm item 5 states that a form only dispatches a submit event if it was not submitted by calling the submit method (which means it only dispatches a submit event if submitted by a button or other implicit method, e.g. pressing enter while focus is on an input type text element).
See Form submitted using submit() from a link cannot be caught by onsubmit handler
I also had the same problem, but gladelly I fixed this by changing the type like from type="submit" to type="button" and it worked.
First Button submits the form and second does not
<body>
<form ng-app="myApp" ng-controller="myCtrl" ng-submit="Sub()">
<div>
S:<input type="text" ng-model="v"><br>
<br>
<button>Submit</button>
//Dont Submit
<button type='button' ng-click="Dont()">Dont Submit</button>
</div>
</form>
<script>
var app = angular.module('myApp', []);
app.controller('myCtrl', function($scope) {
$scope.Sub=function()
{
alert('Inside Submit');
}
$scope.Dont=function()
{
$scope.v=0;
}
});
</script>
</body>
Just add the FormsModule in the imports array of app.module.ts file,
and add import { FormsModule } from '#angular/forms'; at the top of this file...this will work.

jquery submit form with button on event change

when a checkbox is checked, i want the form to submit. However I need parameters contained in my submit button to be part of the request.
This bit of script submits the form but not using the button. I guess because jquery submits it some other way.
$(e.target).find("input[type='radio']").attr("checked", true)
$(".edit_booking").submit()
I've tried pointing jquery to the button containing the params via it's ID and using a click event, but this doesn't work either.
$(e.target).find("input[type='radio']").attr("checked", true)
$("#bookings_next").click()
Bits of the form:
<form novalidate="novalidate" class="simple_form edit_booking" id="edit_booking_9486" action="/venues/plymouth/bookings/9486" accept-charset="UTF-8" method="post">
.............
<input type="submit" name="forward_button" value="Next step" id="bookings_next" />
Many thanks
aha, simple!
$('#bookings_next').trigger('click');
I have to trigger the event.

Clicking a button within a form causes page refresh

I have a form in Angular that has two buttons tags in it. One button submits the form on ng-click. The other button is purely for navigation using ng-click. However, when this second button is clicked, AngularJS is causing a page refresh which triggers a 404. I’ve dropped a breakpoint in the function and it is triggering my function. If I do any of the following, it stops:
If I remove the ng-click, the button doesn’t cause a page refresh.
If I comment out the code in the function, it doesn’t cause a page refresh.
If I change the button tag to an anchor tag (<a>) with href="", then it doesn’t cause a refresh.
The latter seems like the simplest workaround, but why is AngularJS even running any code after my function that causes the page to reload? Seems like a bug.
Here is the form:
<form class="form-horizontal" name="myProfile" ng-switch-when="profile">
<fieldset>
<div class="control-group">
<label class="control-label" for="passwordButton">Password</label>
<div class="controls">
<button id="passwordButton" class="secondaryButton" ng-click="showChangePassword()">Change</button>
</div>
</div>
<div class="buttonBar">
<button id="saveProfileButton" class="primaryButton" ng-click="saveUser()">Save</button>
</div>
</fieldset>
</form>
Here is the controller method:
$scope.showChangePassword = function() {
$scope.selectedLink = "changePassword";
};
If you have a look at the W3C specification, it would seem like the obvious thing to try is to mark your button elements with type='button' when you don't want them to submit.
The thing to note in particular is where it says
A button element with no type attribute specified represents the same thing as a button element with its type attribute set to "submit"
You can try to prevent default handler:
html:
<button ng-click="saveUser($event)">
js:
$scope.saveUser = function (event) {
event.preventDefault();
// your code
}
You should declare the attribute ng-submit={expression} in your <form> tag.
From the ngSubmit docs
http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.directive:ngSubmit
Enables binding angular expressions to onsubmit events.
Additionally it prevents the default action (which for form means sending the request to the server and reloading the current page).
I use directive to prevent default behaviour:
module.directive('preventDefault', function() {
return function(scope, element, attrs) {
angular.element(element).bind('click', function(event) {
event.preventDefault();
event.stopPropagation();
});
}
});
And then, in html:
<button class="secondaryButton" prevent-default>Secondary action</button>
This directive can also be used with <a> and all other tags
You can keep <button type="submit">, but must remove the attribute action="" of <form>.
I wonder why nobody proposed the possibly simplest solution:
don't use a <form>
A <whatever ng-form> does IMHO a better job and without an HTML form, there's nothing to be submitted by the browser itself. Which is exactly the right behavior when using angular.
Add action to your form.
<form action="#">
This answer may not be directly related to the question. It's just for the case when you submit the form using scripts.
According to ng-submit code
var handleFormSubmission = function(event) {
scope.$apply(function() {
controller.$commitViewValue();
controller.$setSubmitted();
});
event.preventDefault();
};
formElement[0].addEventListener('submit', handleFormSubmission);
It adds submit event listener on the form.
But submit event handler wouldn't be called when submit is initiated by calling form.submit(). In this case, ng-submit will not prevent the default action, you have to call preventDefault yourself in ng-submit handler;
To provide a reasonably definitive answer, the HTML Form Submission Algorithm item 5 states that a form only dispatches a submit event if it was not submitted by calling the submit method (which means it only dispatches a submit event if submitted by a button or other implicit method, e.g. pressing enter while focus is on an input type text element).
See Form submitted using submit() from a link cannot be caught by onsubmit handler
I also had the same problem, but gladelly I fixed this by changing the type like from type="submit" to type="button" and it worked.
First Button submits the form and second does not
<body>
<form ng-app="myApp" ng-controller="myCtrl" ng-submit="Sub()">
<div>
S:<input type="text" ng-model="v"><br>
<br>
<button>Submit</button>
//Dont Submit
<button type='button' ng-click="Dont()">Dont Submit</button>
</div>
</form>
<script>
var app = angular.module('myApp', []);
app.controller('myCtrl', function($scope) {
$scope.Sub=function()
{
alert('Inside Submit');
}
$scope.Dont=function()
{
$scope.v=0;
}
});
</script>
</body>
Just add the FormsModule in the imports array of app.module.ts file,
and add import { FormsModule } from '#angular/forms'; at the top of this file...this will work.

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