I have the following validation script I'm trying to get working:
function validate(id){
// checks only inputs with type "text" inside div id-calc
// e.g #haveprice-calc or #dontknow-calc
var input = $("." + id + "-calc input[type='text']").val();
if (input == ""){
alert("You must fill in all items on the form");
}
}
It is passed an ID (the ID is a div that wraps around these specific elements) and then I would like it to check every input of type text within the div=ID
At present, this code works only for the first input in the HTML. If it's unfilled, the alert appears. Once you fill it, the alert will no longer appear. But it doesn't then check the NEXT text input in the DOM.
Some example HTML
<div class="dontknow-calc">
<label>My materials cost</label><input type="text" name="materialcost" id="materialcost" /><br />
<label>My packing materials cost</label><input type="text" name="packingmaterialcost" id="packingmaterialcost" /><br />
<div class="btn btnCalc" id="dontknow">Calculate</div>
</div>
I expect it needs a foreach loop to run through every text element but I'm not sure how.
JSFiddle
Try this:
function validate(id){
// checks only inputs with type "text" inside div id-calc
// e.g #haveprice-calc or #dontknow-calc
var div = $("." + id + "-calc");
$(div).find("input[type = 'text']").each(function() {
if(this.value == "") {
alert("You must fill in all items on the form");
return false;
}
});
}
You can use .each() for this:
function validate(id)
{
$("." + id + "-calc input[type='text']").each(function()
{
if (this.value == "")
{
alert("You must fill in all items on the form");
return false;
}
});
}
I think what you are trying to do is to give an alert if any of the input fields are empty, in that case use .filter() to find out if any of the inputs are empty if any input is empty then show the alert
$(".btnCalc").click(function() {
var id = this.id;
var valid = validate(id);
console.log(valid)
});
function validate(id) {
// checks only inputs with type "text" inside div id-calc
// e.g #haveprice-calc or #dontknow-calc
var $empties = $("." + id + "-calc input[type='text']").filter(function() {
//may also use .trim() like !this.value.trim();
return !this.value
});
if ($empties.length) {
alert("You must fill in all items on the form");
return false;
}
return true;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div class="dontknow-calc">
<label>My materials cost</label>
<input type="text" name="materialcost" id="materialcost" />
<br />
<label>My packing materials cost</label>
<input type="text" name="packingmaterialcost" id="packingmaterialcost" />
<br />
<div class="btn btnCalc" id="dontknow">Calculate</div>
</div>
<br />
<br />
<div class="haveprice-calc">
<label>My other field</label>
<input type="text" name="materiotherfieldalcost" id="otherfield" />
<br />
<div class="btn btnCalc" id="haveprice">Calculate</div>
</div>
Or you could use the jQuery.Validation plugin (see http://jqueryvalidation.org/category/methods/ for some examples), and then use something like this:
$( "#myform" ).validate({
rules: {
field1: {
required: true
}
field2: {
required: true
}
// etc...
}
});
if you want to use each loop you can write some code like this:
$("." + id + "-calc input[type='text']").each(function(index,val){
// for current item value
console.log(val); // to see what's in the val argument
current_item_value = val.value;
});
I hope it helps
Related
My code's function is to alert user if the ptype textfield is empty.
$("input[name*='ptype']").each(function() {
if ($(this).val() == "") {
$(this).css({'background-color' : '#feffe3'});
e.preventDefault();
alert("Enter Value!");
}
});
However, I need to add another criteria where another field amount is not 0. So that the function get triggered when ptype="" && amount!=0. I'm very new in jQuery, and I'm not sure how to use AND operator in here. I've tried to do some based on other questions but it seems not working.
$("input[name*='ptype'][amount!='0']").each(function() {
$("input[name*='ptype'] , [amount!='0']").each(function() {
What am I missing ?
You can do it with && sign. Code depends on where your amount field is located and what it is. If I guess right it should be something like this:
$("input[name*='ptype']").each(function() {
if ($(this).val() == "" && $(this).parent().find(input[name='amount']).val() != 0) {
$(this).css({'background-color' : '#feffe3'});
e.preventDefault();
alert("Enter Value!");
}
});
That code $("input[name*='ptype'][amount!='0']").each(function() { is valid. You have to check the CSS selectors list.
The problem maybe in your *= selection. input[name*="ptype"] means Selects every element whose name attribute value contains the substring "ptype".
$('input[name*="ptype"][amount!="0"]').each(function() {
if ($(this).val() == "") {
$(this).css({'background-color' : '#feffe3'});
e.preventDefault();
alert("Enter Value!");
}
});
Take a look at this test https://jsfiddle.net/xpvt214o/211871/
« where another field» is the key in question.
So you need a selector to check if a selected element is empty and another element is not zero.
Holà!
Logic problem here.
with $(selector) you can look up for some elements.
There is no AND / OR in selectors for many sets of matching element.
A selector is ONE set of matching elements.
No way this selector can check for an attribute value of another set.
So you have to know your markup and navigate a bit... And take care of variable types.
$("input[name*='ptype']").each(function() {
if ( parseInt( $(this).next("input").val() ) != 0) {
$(this).css({"background-color" : "red"});
alert("Enter Value!");
}
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
ptype: <input type="text" name="ptype"><br>
amount: <input type="text" name="amount" value="1">
You have to look for another element's value here, from my understanding. So you have to know what is that "other" element and the methods to use may vary a lot depending on your HTML...
You can use this function in your button.
function check(e){
var verror = false;
$("input[name*='ptype']").each(function(index, value) {
var amount = $($("input[name='amount[]']").get(index)).val();
var ptype = $(this).val();
if(ptype.length <= 0 && amount.length > 0 ){
verror = true;
$(this).focus();
return false;
}
});
if(verror){
e.preventDefault();
alert("Enter Value!");
}
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form>
ptype: <input type="text" name="ptype[]">
amount: <input type="text" name="amount[]" value="1"> <br>
ptype: <input type="text" name="ptype[]">
amount: <input type="text" name="amount[]" value="2"> <br>
<button type="button" onclick="check(event)">Click</button>
</form>
I wants to check, if entered field's value is valid or not using onchange before submitting the page. I have written like below.It validates well.But how to activate 'NEXT' button when there is no error on input entries.
<div><input type="text" name="your_name" id="your_name" onchange = "validate_Name(this,1,4)" />
<span id="your_name-error" class="signup-error">*</span>
</div>
<div><input type="text" name="your_addr" id="your_addr" onchange = "validate_Name(this,1,4)" />
<span id="your_addr-error" class="signup-error">*</span>
</div>
<input class="btnAction" type="button" name="next" id="next" value="Next" style="display:none;">
<script type="text/javascript" src="../inc/validate_js.js"></script>
<script>
$(document).ready(function() {
$("#next").click(function() {
var output = validate(); //return true if no error
if (output) {
var current = $(".active"); //activating NEXT button
} else {
alert("Please correct the fields.");
}
});
}
function validate() {
//What should write here?I want to analyse the validate_js.js value here.
}
</script>
Inside validate_js.js
function validate_Name(inputVal, minLeng, maxLeng) {
if (inputVal.value.length > maxLeng) {
inputVal.style.background = "red";
inputVal.nextElementSibling.innerHTML = "<br>Max Characters:" + maxLeng;
} else if (!(tBox.value.match(letters))) {
inputVal.style.background = "red";
inputVal.nextElementSibling.innerHTML = "<br>Use only a-zA-Z0-9_ ";
} else {
inputVal.style.background = "white";
inputVal.nextElementSibling.innerHTML = "";
}
}
If by "activating" you want to make it visible, you can call $('#next').show().
However if you want to simulate a click on it, with jQuery you can simply call $('#next').click() or $('#next').trigger('click') as described here. Also, you might want to put everything in a form and programmatically submit the form when the input passes validation.
You could possibly trigger the change event for each field so it validates each one again.
eg.
function validate() {
$("#your_name").trigger('change');
$("#your_addr").trigger('change');
}
I am working with a javascript function which works first time but not from the 2nd time.The console shows: Uncaught TypeError: pizza_name is not a function
My html is :
<div class="pizza_name_div">
<input type="text" name="pizza_name" id="pizza_name" placeholder="Enter your pizza name as u like. i.e : my-pizza" value="">
<input type="submit" value="Go" id="pizza_name_submit" onclick="pizza_name()">
</div>
And My js
function pizza_name() {
if( pizza_name != "" ) {
.........
}else{
alert( "please enter a name" );
}
}
It shows alert properly for 1st time.But not form 2nd
Link
js code:
function pizza_name() {
var pizzaName=document.getElementById("pizza_name").value;
if(!pizzaName ) {
alert("no value");
}else{
alert( "please enter a name" );
}
}
Change your code with:
function pizza_name() {
var pizzaName = document.getElementById('pizza_name').value;
if(pizzaName != "") {
//.........
} else {
alert( "please enter a name" );
}
}
It's very important to not assign any value to a possible pizza_name variable inside the function.
You can use jquery for this too
HTML
<div class="pizza_name_div">
<input type="text" name="pizza_name" id="pizza_name" placeholder="Enter your pizza name as u like. i.e : my-pizza" value="">
<input type="submit" value="Go" id="pizza_name_submit" >
</div>
JQUERY
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#pizza_name_submit").on("click", function(){
if( $("#pizza_name").val()) {
alert( $("#pizza_name").val());
}else{
alert("enter value");
}
});
});
demo
Don't re-use names, you're probably overwriting your function to be a string instead.
(that's what I'm assuming happens in the code you didn't show since you're trying to test pizza_name as a string)
function pizza_name() {
if( pizza_name != "" )
You'd be better off naming the function something like getPizzaName. Name the function for what it does, not what it returns.
I have a project which I have to calculate the coordenates between two points. The first coordenates are calculated once the user enters in three text boxes the street, province and city.
How can I execute the code I have in PHP once the user fills out all three boxes and not before?
<form name="form" action="" method="post">
<input type="text" name="provincia" id="provincia">
<input type="text" name="municipio" id="municipio">
<input type="text" name="calle" id="calle">
<input type="submit" value="¡Buscar!"/>
</form>
This is the form the user has to fill in. Once the user writes in all three (without mattering the order) I have php code which Im not sure if it can execute once these boxes have values.
What should I have to use to accomplish this? Ajax? Jquery? Javascript?
Not really sure,
thanks.
are you looking for this?
$(document).ready(function () {
var flag = false;
$("input[type=text]").change(function () {
flag = true;
$("input[type=text]").each(function () {
if ($(this).val().trim() == "") {
flag = false;
}
});
if (flag) {
alert("all have values");
$("input[type=submit]").trigger("click");
}
alert(values);
});
});
edit
<form name="form" action="" method="post">
<input type="text" class="tobeChecked" name="provincia" id="provincia">
<input type="text" class="tobeChecked" name="municipio" id="municipio">
<input type="text" class="tobeChecked" name="calle" id="calle">
<input type="submit" value="¡Buscar!"/>
</form>
$(document).ready(function () {
var flag = false;
$(".tobeChecked").change(function () {
var values = "";
flag = true;
$(".tobeChecked").each(function () {
values += $(this).val().trim() + "+";
if ($(this).val().trim() == "") {
flag = false;
}
});
if (flag) {
alert("all have values");
$("input[type=submit]").trigger("click");
}
});
});
Create a function to validate the required field for those three text boxes and once all are filled with values execute your script:
$('#provincia,#municipio,#calle').blur(function(){
if($('#provincia').val() !="" && $('#municipio').val() !="" && $('#calle').val() !=""){
// Do your process here
}
});
You can use jquery validate plugin to validate these 3 input fields on the client side itself, In that way, the user cannot submit the form until he completely fills the input fields.
Give your Button an ID like:
<input type="submit" id="button" value="¡Buscar!"/>
Then you can do this in JQuery:
$("#button").click(function(){
//Get the value of the fields
var textfield1 = document.getElementById("provincia").value;
var textfield2 = document.getElementById("municipio").value;
var textfield3 = document.getElementById("calle").value;
//Check if Values are filled
if ( !textfield1.match(/\S/) || !textfield2.match(/\S/) || !textfield3.match(/\S/))
{
//execute your script
}
I hope it helps.
use jquery .change() function
$( "#provincia" ).change(function() {
//you can do something here
alert( "Handler for .change() called." );
});
There are a series of textboxes like:
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" />
User can fill up the textbox values from top to bottom order. Only first textbox is required and all other textboxes are optional.
Allowed order to fill textbox values:
1st
1st & 2nd
1st, 2nd & 3rd
and likewise in sequence order
Dis-allowed order:
2nd
1st & 3rd
1st, 2nd & 4th
This means that user needs to fill up the first textbox only or can fill up the other textboxes in sequential order. User can NOT skip one textbox and then fillup the next one.
How to validate this in javascript/jQuery?
Any help is highly appreciated!
I would personaly use the disabled html attribute.
See this jsFiddle Demo
html
<form>
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" required="required" />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" disabled="disabled" />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" disabled="disabled" />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" disabled="disabled" />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" disabled="disabled" />
<input type="submit" />
</form>
(Note the required attribute for HTML5)
jquery
$('input.jq-textBox').on('keyup', function(){
var next = $(this).next('input.jq-textBox');
if (next.length) {
if ($.trim($(this).val()) != '') next.removeAttr('disabled');
else {
var nextAll = $(this).nextAll('input.jq-textBox');
nextAll.attr('disabled', 'disbaled');
nextAll.val('');
}
}
})
Also see nextAll() jquery Method
Edit :
If you want to hide the disabled inputs in order to show them only when the previous input is filled, just add this css :
input[disabled] {
display: none;
}
Demo
You can iterate over the list backwards to quickly figure out whether there is a gap.
var last = false,
list = $(".jq-textBox").get().reverse();
$.each(list, function (idx) {
if ($(this).val() !== "") {
last = true;
}
else if (last) {
alert("you skipped one");
}
else if (list.length === idx + 1) {
alert("must enter 1");
}
});
http://jsfiddle.net/rnRPA/1/
Try
var flag = false, valid = true;
$('.jq-textBox').each(function(){
var value = $.trim(this.value);
if(flag && value.length !=0){
valid = false;
return false;
}
if(value.length == 0){
flag = true;
}
});
if(!valid){
console.log('invalid')
}
Demo: Fiddle
You can find all inputs that are invalid (filled in before the previous input) this way:
function invalidFields() {
return $('.jq-textBox')
.filter(function(){ return !$(this).val(); })
.next('.jq-textBox')
.filter(function(){ return $(this).val(); });
}
You can then test for validity:
if (invalidFields().length) {
// invalid
}
You can modify invalid fields:
invalidFields().addClass('invalid');
To make the first field required, just add the HTML attribute required to it.
I think a more elegant solution would be to only display the first textbox, and then reveal the second once there is some input in the first, and then so on (when they type in the second, reveal the third). You could combine this with other solutions for testing the textboxes.
To ensure the data is entered into the input elements in the correct order, you can set up a system which modifies the disabled and readonly states accordingly:
/* Disable all but the first textbox. */
$('input.jq-textBox').not(':first').prop('disabled', true);
/* Detect when the textbox content changes. */
$('body').on('blur', 'input.jq-textBox', function() {
var
$this = $(this)
;
/* If the content of the textbox has been cleared, disable this text
* box and enable the previous one. */
if (this.value === '') {
$this.prop('disabled', true);
$this.prev().prop('readonly', false);
return;
}
/* If this isn't the last text box, set it to readonly. */
if(!$this.is(':last'))
$this.prop('readonly', true);
/* Enable the next text box. */
$this.next().prop('disabled', false);
});
JSFiddle demo.
With this a user is forced to enter more than an empty string into an input field before the next input is essentially "unlocked". They can't then go back and clear the content of a previous input field as this will now be set to readonly, and can only be accessed if all following inputs are also cleared.
JS
var prevEmpty = false;
var validated = true;
$(".jq-textBox").each(function(){
if($(this).val() == ""){
prevEmpty = true;
}else if($(this).val() != "" && !prevEmpty){
console.log("nextOne");
}else{
validated = false;
return false;
}
});
if(validated)
alert("ok");
else
alert("ERROR");
FIDDLE
http://jsfiddle.net/Wdjzb/1/
Perhaps something like this:
var $all = $('.jq-textBox'),
$empty = $all.filter(function() { return 0 === $.trim(this.value).length; }),
valid = $empty.length === 0
|| $empty.length != $all.length
&& $all.index($empty.first()) + $empty.length === $all.length;
// do something depending on whether valid is true or false
Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/3UzHf/ (thanks to Arun P Johny for the starting fiddle).
That is, if the index of the first empty item plus the total number of empties adds up to the total number of items then all the empties must be at the end.
This is what you need :
http://jsfiddle.net/crew1251/jCMhx/
html:
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" /><br />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" disabled/><br />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" disabled/><br />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" disabled/><br />
<input type="text" class="jq-textBox" disabled/>
js:
$(document).on('keyup', '.jq-textBox:first', function () {
$input = $(this);
if ($input.val()!='')
{
$('input').prop('disabled',false);
}
else {
$('input:not(:first)').prop('disabled',true);
}
});
var checkEmpty = function ()
{
var formInvalid = false;
$('#MyForm').each(function () {
if ($(this).val() === '') {
formInvalid = true;
}
});
if (formInvalid) {
alert('One or more fields are empty. Please fill up all fields');
return false;
}
else
return true;
}