I'm currently adding some input fields to a div. There is also the option to remove the just added input fields.
Now the problem is, if you add 4 input fields and let's say you removed number 2.
You will get something like this
id=1
id=3
id=4
Now when you will add a new one it will add id=5.
So we end up with:
id=1
id=3
id=4
id=5
JS :
var iArtist = 1,
tArtist = 1;
$(document).on('click', '#js-addArtist', function() {
var artist = $('#js-artist');
var liData = '<div class="js-artist"><input id="artiestNaam_' + iArtist + '"><input id="artiestURL_' + iArtist + '"><span class="js-removeArtist">remove</span></div>';
$(liData).appendTo(artist);
iArtist++;
tArtist++;
});
$(document).on('click', '.js-removeArtist', function() {
if (tArtist > 1) {
$(this).parents('.js-artist').slideUp("normal", function() {
$(this).remove();
tArtist--;
});
}
});
$(document).on('click', '#js-print', function() {
var historyVar = [];
historyVar['artiestNaam_0'] = $('#artiestNaam_0').val();
historyVar['artiestURL_0'] = $('#artiestURL_0').val();
console.log(historyVar);
});
HTML :
<span id="js-addArtist">add</span>
<div id="js-artist">
<div class="js-artist">
<input id="artiestNaam_0">
<input id="artiestURL_0">
<span class="js-removeArtist">remove</span>
</div>
</div>
<span id="js-print">print</span>
For now it's okay.
Now for the next part I'm trying to get the data from the input fields:
historyVar['artiestNaam_0'] = $('#artiestNaam_0').val();
historyVar['artiestURL_0'] = $('#artiestURL_0').val();
How can I make sure to get the data of all the input fields?
Working version
You could do with a whole lot less code. For example purposes I'm going to keep it more simple than your question, but the priciple remains the same:
<input name="artiest_naam[]" />
<input name="artiest_naam[]" />
<input name="artiest_naam[]" />
The bracket at the end make it an array. We do not use any numbers in the name.
When you submit, it will get their index because it´s an array, which returns something like:
$_POST['artiestnaam'] = array(
[0] => "whatever you typed in the first",
[1] => "whatever you typed in the second",
[2] => "whatever you typed in the third"
)
If I would add and delete a hundred inputs, kept 3 random inputs and submit that, it will still be that result. The code will do the counting for you.
Nice bonus: If you add some javascript which enables to change the order of the inputs, it will be in the order the user placed them (e.g. if I had changed nuymber 2 and 3, my result would be "one, third, second").
Working fiddle
You could use each() function to go through all the divs with class js-artist:
$('.js-artist').each(function(){
var artiestNaam = $('input:eq(0)',this);
var artiestURL = $('input:eq(1)',this);
historyVar[artiestNaam.attr('id')] = artiestNaam.val();
historyVar[artiestURL.attr('id')] = artiestURL.val();
});
Hope this helps.
var iArtist = 1,
tArtist = 1;
$(document).on('click', '#js-addArtist', function() {
var artist = $('#js-artist');
var liData = '<div class="js-artist"><input id="artiestNaam_' + iArtist + '"><input id="artiestURL_' + iArtist + '"><span class="js-removeArtist">remove</span></div>';
$(liData).appendTo(artist);
iArtist++;
tArtist++;
});
$(document).on('click', '.js-removeArtist', function() {
if (tArtist > 1) {
$(this).parents('.js-artist').slideUp("normal", function() {
$(this).remove();
tArtist--;
});
}
});
$(document).on('click', '#js-print', function() {
var historyVar = [];
$('.js-artist').each(function(){
var artiestNaam = $('input:eq(0)',this);
var artiestURL = $('input:eq(1)',this);
historyVar[artiestNaam.attr('id')] = artiestNaam.val();
historyVar[artiestURL.attr('id')] = artiestURL.val();
});
console.log(historyVar);
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<span id="js-addArtist">add</span>
<div id="js-artist">
<div class="js-artist">
<input id="artiestNaam_0">
<input id="artiestURL_0">
<span class="js-removeArtist">remove</span>
</div>
</div>
<span id="js-print">print</span>
Initialize a count variable. This way if an input field is removed, a new id still gets initialized. To get the data for each of them, jQuery has a convenient each function to iterate over all elements.
Hope this helps
count = 0;
$("#add").on("click", function() {
count++;
$("body").append("<input id='" + count + "'</input>");
});
$("#remove").on("click", function() {
var index = prompt("Enter the index of the input you want to remove");
$("input:eq(" + index + ")").remove();
});
$("#log-data").on("click", function() {
$("input").each(function() {
console.log($(this).val());
});
});
#btn-group {
margin-bottom: 20px;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="btn-group">
<button id="add">Add Input Fields</button>
<button id="remove">Remove Input Fields</button>
<button id="log-data">Log Data</button>
</div>
Related
Hello i want to display the button only when the value does not exceed 25. My code looks like this. Value in my product list element is 25. And with each click I add 6 to my input[name='skip] element. What i'm doing wrong? Note that my input[name='skip] is increasing with each click.
$(function () {
$("#button-submit").click(function () {
var $productList = $(".product-list");
var $value = $("input[name='skip']");
$value.val(parseInt($value.val()) + 6);
if (parseInt($productList.val()) >= parseInt($value.val())) {
$("#button-submit").hide();
}
});
});
Your condition is incorrect. So you should use < instead of >=
$("#button-submit").click(function () {
var $productList = $(".product-list");
var $value = $("input[name='skip']");
$value.val(parseInt($value.val()) + 6);
if (parseInt($productList.val()) < parseInt($value.val())) {
$("#button-submit").hide();
}
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" class="product-list" value="25">
<input type="text" name="skip" value="0">
<button type="button" id="button-submit">Click</button>
Also your code could be simpler
$("#button-submit").click(function () {
var $value = $("input[name='skip']");
$value.val(+$value.val() + 6);
if (+$(".product-list").val() < +$value.val()) {
$(this).hide();
}
});
you seem to have an error with the selector
var $productList = $(".product-list']");
should probably be something like
var $productList = $(".product-list");
Edit:
i think you might want to use
$(".product-list").length instead of $(".product-list").val() since it looks like its a collection of items.
Just a guess tho as you havent provided the full markup.
Are you looking to get the count of list items? I have a sample for counting list items below. Also, I noticed the comparison of productlist to value was backwords so I reversed the operator less than as opposed to greater than.
$(function() {
$("#button-submit").click(function() {
// get number of list items
var $productList = $('.product-list').children('li').length;
var $value = $("input[name='skip']");
//alert("value: "+$value.val());
//alert("value: "+$value.val()+" productlist: " + $productList);
$value.val(parseInt($value.val()) + 6);
if ($productList <= parseInt($value.val())) {
$("#button-submit").hide();
}
});
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input name="skip" value=0>
<button id="button-submit">Click</button>
<div class="product-list"></div>
<ul class="product-list">
<li>Apple</li>
<li>Banana</li>
<li>Carrot</li>
<li>Pear</li>
<li>Cherry</li>
<li>Watermelon</li>
<li>Lemon</li>
<li>Kiwi</li>
<li>Grape</li>
</ul>
I have such code in my view:
<div class="box">
<input type="text" name="product[size_ids][<%= size.id %>][quantity][1]" readonly class="product_quantity" placeholder="quantity from" value="1">
</div>
In my js I'd like to change [1] into [2] or [3] and so on after [quantity], depending on how many additional forms I create. How can I do that?
This is what I have in my JS:
var i = 1
$('.add_another_price_btn').click( function (e) {
e.preventDefault();
$(this).prev().clone().insertBefore($(this));
$(this).prev().find('.remove_another_price_btn').show();
$(this).prev().find('.product_quantity').removeAttr('readonly');
$(this).prev().find('.product_quantity').attr('value', '');
//This is what I tried, but it doesn't work properly.
$(this).prev().find('.product_quantity')
.attr('name', function() { return $(this).attr('name') + '['+ (i++) + ']' });
$('.remove_another_price_btn').click( function (ee) {
ee.preventDefault();
$(this).parent().parent().remove();
});
You can do a simple string operation with substr and lastIndexOf to replace the last part of the name.
// get input and name of input
var input = $("input");
var name = input.attr("name");
// change just the last part
name = name.substr(0, name.lastIndexOf("[")) + "[2]";
// set name back to input
input.attr("name", name);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" name="product[size_ids][<%= size.id %>][quantity][1]" readonly class="product_quantity" placeholder="quantity from" value="1">
Save the clone
Break the name using substring or split and parseInt
Like this
var $clone = $(this).prev().clone(),
$prodQ = $clone.find('.product_quantity'),
name = $prodQ.attr("name"),
parts = name.split("quantity]["),
newName = parts[0]+"quantity][",
num = parseInt(parts[1],10); // or a counter
num++;
newName += num+"]";
$prodQ.removeAttr('readonly').attr('value', '').attr('name',newName);
$clone.insertBefore($(this));
$clone.find('.remove_another_price_btn').show();
By using relative references I am able to remove items which have been added to the list within a specfic part of the form. For example, by adding a requirement it can be deleted just from the requirement.
My issue is two fold:
Adding an item to references adds it to all three categories
When I try to add values to the other sections (qualifications) it says my input was blank.
http://jsfiddle.net/spadez/9sX6X/60/
var container = $('.copies'),
value_src = $('#current'),
maxFields = 10,
currentFields = 1;
$('.form').on('click', '.add', function () {
value_src.focus();
if ($.trim(value_src.val()) != '') {
if (currentFields < maxFields) {
var value = value_src.val();
var html = '<div class="line">' +
'<input id="accepted" type="text" value="' + value + '" />' +
'<input type="button" value="X" class="remove" />' +
'</div>';
$(html).appendTo(container);
value_src.val('');
currentFields++;
} else {
alert("You tried to add a field when there are already " + maxFields);
}
} else {
alert("You didn't enter anything");
}
})
.on('click', '.remove', function () {
value_src.focus();
$(this).parents('.line').remove();
currentFields--;
});
Is it possible to modify this code without repeating it for each section, by using relatively references such as "parent" for example. I want to use this same script for all three sections but have it so each list is independant.
I'm new to javascript so I was wondering if this is possible because I only managed to get it working on the delete.
You have to use this to get the current element. In your case this refers to the button which was clicked.
The next step is to get the input box which belongs to the button. E.g. $(this).prev(); like in this example:
$('.form').on('click', '.add', function () {
var value_src = $(this).prev();
http://jsfiddle.net/9sX6X/62/
The same is also true for your appending part. Your are appending your html to all three elements which match $('.copies'). Instead you have to try to get there from this.
$('.form').on('click', '.add', function () {
var value_src = $(this).prev();
var copies = $(this).parent().prev();
http://jsfiddle.net/9sX6X/63/
I would suggest adding a wrapping div to each section.
<div class="section">
<h4>Requirements</h4>
<div class="copies"></div>
<div class="line">
<input id="current" type="text" name="content" placeholder="Requirement" />
<input type="button" value="Add" class="add" />
</div>
</div>
Then you can do this:
var $section = $(this).closest(".section");
$(html).appendTo($section.find(".copies"));
This will add to just the related .copies element instead of to all .copies as your code does now. A similar approach can be used for all other elements as well.
I have a page which contains a 10 items(formatted list).Here in this page I need to add check box for each item and add the item as the value to each check box.when the user click on the check box the selected value should be passed to a new page.Can anyone help me how to add a check box for the innerHTML in java script.
Code:
var newsletter=document.getElementById("block-system-main");
var districolumn=getElementsByClassName('view-id-_create_a_news_letter_',newsletter,'div');
if(districolumn!=null)
{
var newsletterall=newsletter.getElementsByTagName('li');
alert(newsletterall[0].innerHTML);
var all=newsletter.innerHTML;
newsletter.innerHTML="<input type='button' onclick='changeText()' value='Change Text'/>";
}
function changeText()
{
alert("dfgsdg");
}
I don't exactly understand what each part of your code is doing, but i'll try and give a general answer:
In your HTML, do something like this:
<form id="myForm" action="nextPage.com">
<div id="Boxes"></div>
</form>
Change the above names to wherever you want your checkboxes to be written.
And your function:
function changeText()
{
for(var i=0 ; i < newsletterall.length ; i++)
{
var inner = document.getElementById("Boxes").innerHTML;
var newBox = ('<input type="checkbox" name="item[]" value="' + newsletter[i] + '>' + newsletterall[i]);
document.getElementById("Boxes").innerHTML = inner + newBox;
}
document.getElementById("myForm").submit();
}
The last line of code submits the checkboxes automatically. If you don't want that, remove that line, and add a submit button to the form myForm.
$('ul#list li').each(
function() {
var me = $(this),
val = me.html(),
ckb = $('<input type="checkbox" />');
ckb.click(function() {
var where=val;
window.location.href='http://google.com/?'+where;
});
me.html('');
me.append(ckb).append($('<span>'+val+'</span>'));
}
);
im very new at javascipt (im php developer) so im really confused trying to get this working.
In my web form i have 3 textfields (name, description and year) that i need to let the user add as many he needs, clicking on a web link, also, any new group of text fields need to have a new link on the side for removing it (remove me).
I tried some tutorial and some similar questions on stackoverflow but i dont get it well. If you can show me a code example just with this function i may understand the principle. Thanks for any help!
this is the simplest thing that has come to my mind, you can use it as a starting point:
HTML
<div class='container'>
Name<input type='text' name='name[]'>
Year<input type='text' name='year[]'>
Description<input type='text' name='description[]'>
</div>
<button id='add'>Add</button>
<button id='remove'>Remove</button>
jQuery
function checkRemove() {
if ($('div.container').length == 1) {
$('#remove').hide();
} else {
$('#remove').show();
}
};
$(document).ready(function() {
checkRemove()
$('#add').click(function() {
$('div.container:last').after($('div.container:first').clone());
checkRemove();
});
$('#remove').click(function() {
$('div.container:last').remove();
checkRemove();
});
});
fiddle here: http://jsfiddle.net/Fc3ET/
In this way you take advantage of the fact that in PHP you can post arrays: server side you just have to iterate on $_POST['name'] to access the various submissions
EDIT - the following code is a different twist: you have a remove button for each group:
$(document).ready(function() {
var removeButton = "<button id='remove'>Remove</button>";
$('#add').click(function() {
$('div.container:last').after($('div.container:first').clone());
$('div.container:last').append(removeButton);
});
$('#remove').live('click', function() {
$(this).closest('div.container').remove();
});
});
Fiddle http://jsfiddle.net/Fc3ET/2/
jsFidde using append and live
String.format = function() {
var s = arguments[0];
for (var i = 0; i < arguments.length - 1; i++) {
var reg = new RegExp("\\{" + i + "\\}", "gm");
s = s.replace(reg, arguments[i + 1]);
}
return s;
}
var html = "<div>" + '<input name="name{0}" type="text" />' + '<input name="description{1}" type="text" />' + '<input name="year{2}" type="text" />' + '<input type="button" value="remove" class="remove" />' + '</div>',
index = 0;
$(document).ready(function() {
$('.adder').click(function() {
addElements();
})
addElements();
$('.remove').live('click', function() {
$(this).parent().remove();
})
});
function addElements() {
$('#content').append(String.format(html, index, index, index));
index = index + 1;
}
Look at this: http://jsfiddle.net/MkCtV/8/ (updated)
The only thing to remember, though, is that all your cloned form fields will have the same names. However, you can split those up and iterate through them server-side.
JavaScript:
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.6.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
$("#addnew").click(function(e) {
$("#firstrow").clone() // copy the #firstrow
.removeAttr("id") // remove the duplicate ID
.append('<a class="remover" href="#">Remove</a>') // add a "remove" link
.insertAfter("#firstrow"); // add to the form
e.preventDefault();
});
$(".remover").live("click",function(e) {
// .live() acts on .removers that aren't created yet
$(this).parent().remove(); // remove the parent div
e.preventDefault();
});
});
</script>
HTML:
Add New Row
<form id="myform">
<div id="firstrow">
Name: <input type="text" name="name[]" size="5">
Year: <input type="text" name="year[]" size="4">
Description: <input type="text" name="desc[]" size="6">
</div>
<div>
<input type="submit">
</div>
</form>
Try enclosing them in a div element and then you can just remove the entire div.
Try this
Markup
<div class="inputFields">
..All the input fields here
</div>
Add
<div class="additionalFields">
</div>
JS
$("#add").click(function(){
var $clone = $(".inputFields").clone(true);
$clone.append($("<span>Remove</span").click(functio(){
$(this).closest(".inputFields").remove();
}));
$(".additionalFields").append($clone);
});
There are 2 plugins you may consider:
jQuery Repeater
jquery.repeatable
This question has been posted almost 4 years ago. I just provide the info in case someone needs it.