So I'm trying to create a webpage where the user puts in there course information. There is an add button on the page, that adds another text field for them if they need more fields.
Once the Add button is pressed, the page is reset and all of the information that has been previously entered is gone. I could save the information in an array, and when or if the the add button is pressed save the information into an array, and re populate the fields using what was stored in the array.
My question is: Is there a way to refresh a page, and keep the information in the text fields, without taking the long process mention above, is there some attribute that I can use that will not delete information that has been previously entered into ?
If you code HTML5, you can use localStorage with a fallback to cookies. Also, if the information should be removed after session end, then you may use sessionStorage instead.
You can use ajax i think...it runs in background no page reload is done.
Assuming this HTML:
<form id="course-info-form" action="submit-course-info.php" method="post">
Professor name: <input type="text" name="professor"><br>
Additional info:<br>
<input type="text" name="additional0"><br>
<input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
<br>
<button id="add-button">Add Field</button>
<!-- Use jQuery for DOM manipulation -->
<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.10.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
With JavaScript / jQuery:
var courseInfoForm = $('#course-info-form');
var addButton = $('#add-button');
// Keep track of how many fields there are, so each can have a unique "name" attribute
var additionalFieldsAdded = 1;
// Whenever "Add Field" is clicked, create another input field
addButton.on('click', function() {
var newInput = $("<input>", {
type: "text"
name: "additional" + additionalFieldsAdded
});
courseInfoForm.append(newInput, "<br>");
additionalFieldsAdded += 1;
});
I'm not very good at PHP. In your PHP script, make a while loop that checks to see if isset($_POST['additional0']), and additional1, additional2, etc, until you are sure that there were no more additional fields passed. Then store all those additional details into an array, and handle it how you see fit.
As for your original question, I recommend using my solution instead. It's better to avoid unnecessarily reloading the page, if all you're doing is simply adding a new form each time.
I suppose you could capture the information that was "tentatively-submitted" when the "Add Field" button is clicked, and then in your PHP script loop through all the additional fields and create 1 more input element each time another field is added, and set the value attribute of each "old" input element to whatever was "tentatively-submitted."
So, to answer your question, you can set the default value of an input field (server-side) with:
// add-course-information.php
<?php
$addingField = false;
// Check for the optional "?do=addfield" parameter
if (isset($_POST['do']) && $_POST['do'] == 'addfield') {
$addingField = true;
$fields = array();
$nextField = 'additional' . count($fields);
// Get each piece of POSTed field data
while (isset($_POST[$nextField]) && $_POST[$nextField] != '') {
array_push($fields, $_POST[$nextField]);
$nextField = 'additional' . count($fields);
}
}
?>
<!-- Silly HTML! -->
<?php
// If adding a field, recreate and repopulate all previous fields
if ($addingField) {
for ($i = 0; i < count($fields); i++) { ?>
<input type="text" name="additional<?= $i ?>" value="<?= $fields[$i] ?>">
<?php } ?>
<input type="text" name="additional<?php echo count($fields) + 1 ?>">
<?php }
// Otherwise, show the default additional field
else { ?>
<input type="text" name="additional0">
<?php } ?>
<!-- More awesome HTML! -->
That might work... (Currently untested.)
What that page is supposed to do (if it works) is:
On default, give the user his initial setup, with just 1 additional input field, "additional0".
When the user clicks "Add Field," ?do=addfield should be POSTed to add-course-information.php (you can write that part), and when this page receives the do=addfield parameter, then it knows to loop through all the submitted additional fields, and store them each into an array, and then afterwards output all the submitted data back into another loop's-worth of dynamically generated <input> elements.
But I think that that would be much more complicated, and unnecessarily increase the processing your server has to do. It could even be abused if someone was to hammer the "Add Field" button hundreds of thousands of times a minute, eventually making your for-loops iterate millions of times... (Unless you imposed a limit on the maximum number of fields, which would be easy.)
However, you might as well leverage the client's processing power if it's available.
Related
I searched widely to find a solution for this, and eventually had to realise (as others have before me) that a form will always reset to the values with which it is loaded.
So my solution is to load the form with empty values, and then use pure Javascript to update the values from other hidden inputs. It requires one hidden input, and one line of JS, for each user input. My example below shows the code for just one input. Any further inputs follow the same pattern.
The input (I have omitted the label for clarity):
<li>
<input type="text" name="firstname" id="firstname" value='' tabindex="1" size="45" />
</li>
The hidden input:
<input type = 'hidden' id = 'jfn' name = 'jfn' value = '<?php echo $firstname; ?>' />
The Javascript (in the 'onload' or (if jQuery is available, 'document ready') function)':
document.getElementById('firstname').value = document.getElementById('jfn').value;
When the form is submitted the inputs (in $_POST) are saved to SESSION, whence they can be recalled for as long as the SESSION lasts:
foreach ($_POST as $name=>$value) {
$_SESSION['email'][$name] = $value;
}
and later recovered:
if (!empty($_SESSION['email'])) {
extract ($_SESSION['email']);
}
When/if the form is reloaded, the input values are initially empty. The previously input values are loaded into the hidden inputs. After the page has reloaded those values are transferred to the (visible) inputs. The 'Reset' button will now clear the form.
Basically, it's a form that needs specific information, "Tamanho"/"Tamanhos" means "size"/"sizes", which I have a list of acceptable sizes that goes from 8 to 30 that are registered in a database (to make it easier to add more acceptable sizes if needed), the user should be able to chose many "sizes" and put a quantity of "how many products of that size?" in an input right after it.
I was able to create an JavaScript function AddTam() called by a button that generates one more block to fill, with a select, and all the block's select inputs are named Tam[], so their values pass as an array, and their respective inputs named as "TamQnt8", the number 8 at the end refers to the size chosen, it changes every time the user chooses other size for the same block using other function DefTam(), that way, I could verify the sizes array in the Back-End, and use it to get their respective quantities and organize it all in an array, to finally send it to the database.
But for some reason, when I test if the information is passing through correctly, it doesn't send any data in the key "Tam" saying it's undefined when I tested it, in PHP I'm testing: if(!empty($_POST['Tam'])) but i also tried isset().
I just don't know what's wrong, so I was asking if isn't it the method I'm using insertAdjacentHTML() to generate the blocks, and if it works as well as createElement() in forms.
Also, when I created the blocks manually and instead of many selects I used checkboxes, it was working, just decided to change to the generated method because the checkboxes took way too much space in the screen, even worse for mobile.
Here's a simplification of the code in HTML:
<form method="post">
<section>
<div class="littlebutton" id="addTamanho" onclick="AddTam()">Add Tamanho</div>
</section>
<script>
var contador = 0;
function AddTam(){
let tamTitulo = document.querySelector('#addTamanho');
tamTitulo.insertAdjacentHTML("afterend",
'<div class="cellTam cell">'+
'<select name="Tam[]" class="'+contador+'tam8 '+contador+'" onchange="DefTam(this)">'+
'<?php foreach ($_SESSION["tamanhos"] as $key => $value) { ?>'+
'<option value="<?php echo $value["tamanho"];?>"><?php echo $value["tamanho"];?></option>'+
'<?php }?>'+
'</select>'+
'Tem => <input class="qnt" id="'+contador+'tam8" name="TamQnt8" type="number" min=1>'+
'</div>');
contador++
}
function DefTam(ElementTam){
let infoTam = ElementTam.value;
let refTam = ElementTam.getAttribute("class");
refTam = refTam.split(" ");
let relInput = document.getElementById(refTam[0]);
ElementTam.setAttribute("class", refTam[refTam.length-1]+"tam"+infoTam+" "+refTam[refTam.length-1]);
relInput.setAttribute("name", "TamQnt"+infoTam);
relInput.setAttribute("id", refTam[refTam.length-1]+"tam"+infoTam);
}
</script>
<button class="post" name="Inserir" type="submit">Postar</button>
</form>
Output: The Add Tamanho button, 3 generated blocks of the form and the Elements tab of browser's Developer tools
Sorry if I wrote something wrong or weirdly, still learning English, or if it's just a silly mistake in my code, also, any help is welcome.
I have a form which asks for employment history, where you have applied to college etc. So for example for colleges they applied to I have one text box at first and there is a button below that calls a javascript function to add another text input right below it. When I first made this form I was doing that with a few different pieces of data then once they were submitted I would get them from $_POST and put them in arrays then add each element of the array to the corresponding table in my db. All of a sudden though, I can no longer submit my form and I get a message telling me that I have tried to get an unspecified index. However when i inspect the text inputs in my browser they are correctly named. I read that I should name them college[] so that they all go into an array, but that also did not work.... now what?
js:
var numcol = 1;
function addnewschool(){
numcol++;
var container = document.getElementById("collegecontainer");
container.appendChild(document.createTextNode(numcol));
var input = document.createElement("input");
input.type = "text";
input.name = 'applied'+numcol;
container.appendChild(input);
container.appendChild(document.createElement("br"));}
html:
<p class="text-dark mb-4">List the Colleges you have applied to:<br>
<div id="collegecontainer" name="collegecontainer">
<input type="text" name='applied1'><br>
</div>
<input type="button" id="addcollege" name="addcollege" value="Add College"
onClick="addnewschool()"><br>
</p>
php:
$applied = array();
foreach($_POST['applied'] as $value){
array_push($applied, $value);
}
Update: Ok so I changed it to another way and that didn't work so i decided to just copy an earlier version of it which was working and paste it into the correct layout. And that worked... SO now that it was fixed i continued adding to it. I added "required" to a few tags, changed some styling a bit, and changed my javascript file a bit. But now I'm having the same issues as before. All of my POST arrays only have the first value in them. What could I have added that changed this? Has anyone ever had any issues like this?
Your first additional input should have index "applied1", not "applied2"
look at:
var numcol = 1; // put this to 0
function addnewschool(){
numcol++; // or move this to the end of the function
You don't need to add a different name for each input. Just use applied[] in all input names.
To get the array in PHP, just use $_POST['applied'].
If you want to use each of them later, you could use a foreach, like
foreach ($_POST['applied'] as $value) {
// Do what you want. Retrieve the value using $value
}
Or any other method you prefer.
Name your text input field(s) applied[] and when you process the form the post value of $_POST['applied'] will be an array already filled for you with however many entries were completed.
To get the data into your table:
foreach ($_POST['applied'] as $id => $applied) {
$sql = "INSERT INTO Colleges(id, college) VALUES('$id','$applied')";
if($conn2->query($sql) === TRUE){
echo "New Record created successfully";
} else {
echo "Error: " . $sql . "<br>" . $conn2->error;
}
} // end of foreach
Example is here.
I'm moving countries from one select box to another, when I submit the form I want the values in the right text box to be used by php. When I give the right box a name for a php array, like ToLB[] the Javascript fails. How can I handle this so that the submitted values will be used by php processes?
in forms it's a typical process to use an action and a method. This is declared within the form tag. For example
<form name='phpSend' method='post' action='myActions.php'>
Now when your form is submitted it is instantly 'posted' to the url myActions.php and is automatically declared as a $_POST array.
The names of the inputs become the array keys and the value becomes the value.
A basic method is to do a procedural action. Meaning if you leave the action attribute blank, the action will submit the form to the page you're already on and use if statements to check if the form has been submitted.
if(isset($_POST)&&isset($_POST['someName'])){
//form submitted!
}
Now, I've never used a multiple select before so you may want to var_dumb() or print_r() your output to double check but my guess is it'll be an Array within the $_POST array.
Submitting with javascript
if(document.getElementByName('phpSend').submit){//or however your checking
var selected=[];
for(var e=0;e<document.getElementByTagName('select').options.length;e++){
if(document.getElementByTagName('select').options[e].selected==true)selected[e]=document.getElementByTagName('select').options[e].value;
}
//then add the selected array to your preferred method of sending your data to your php document
}
I often encounter a situation like this and I usually submit the select options as a string.
Add an hidden field to your form:
<input type="hidden" name="valuesToSubmit">
<script type="text/javascript">
var selectobject=document.getElementById("myselect");
var myValues = "";
for (var i=0; i<selectobject.length; i++){
myValues = myValues + selectobject.options[i].value + ",";
}
document.form.valuesToSubmit.value=myValues;
</script>
In the PHP scripts that receive the posting data you can use the explode function to turn your sting into an array and then iterate on it ... depends what you need to do. Remember to remove the last unwanted ","
I have taken a look at your code.
There are some missing parts and amendments to do to make it works.
I didn't test the amendments but I think they should work.
1)you have to add the hidden field inside the form.
<form name="combo_box" action="test.php">
<input type="hidden" name="valuesToSubmit" value="">
2)Then you have to give the id to the select box because you use the id to reference the object like this var selectobject=document.getElementById("ToLB");
<select multiple size="10" name="ToLB" id="ToLB" style="width:150">
3)Change th submit button with a normal button so you can force the submit only when the loop is ended and the values have been passed into the hidden field.
<input type="button" name="submit" id="submit" value="Submit" onClick="updateValues()">
4)Force the submit at the end of the javascript
function updateValues(){
var selectobject=document.getElementById("ToLB");
var myValues = "";
for (var i=0; i<selectobject.length; i++){
myValues = myValues + selectobject.options[i].value + ",";
}
document.form.valuesToSubmit.value=myValues;
document.combo_box.submit();
}
I'm working on a form that adds up the totals selected (via checkboxes). In my JavaScript file, build.js, the totals are added together. On my PHP page, the code takes the items selected on the previous form/HTML page and passes them to what is shown on the PHP page. I want to be able to take the total that was added up via JavaScript on the form page and bring it over to be listed as a total underneath all the options that were selected.
My knowledge of PHP and JavaScript are very rudimentary. This is the first real form I have created in either of these languages. I have poured over this site and the internet in general and have not been able to get any of the options I've found to work. I think I just lucked out on getting the form this far, so I apologize if my code isn't very clean!
Any help would be amazing, as specific as possible please. Here is my code:
The JavaScript that adds the total:
$(document).ready(function() {
$("input[type=checkbox]:checked").attr("checked", false);
function recalculate() {
var sum = 0;
$("input[type=checkbox]:checked").each(function() {
sum += parseInt($(this).attr("rel"));
});
$("#output").html(sum);
}
$("input[type=checkbox]").change(function() {
recalculate();
});
});
Code written on the form itself that shows the total:
<span id="output" class="total"></span><BR><BR>
Code written on the PHP page:
<b>Estimate:</b>
<?php
$aTruck = $_POST['formSelected'];
if(empty($aTruck))
{
echo("You didn't select a truck.<BR><BR>");
}
else
{
$N = count($aTruck);
echo("<h3>Truck Type: ");
for($i=0; $i < $N; $i++)
{
echo($aTruck[$i] . " ");
}}
$aAddons = $_POST['formAddons'];
if(empty($aAddons))
{
echo("You didn't select any options.");
}
else
foreach ($aAddons as $v)
{
echo "<h3> $v </h3>";
}
?>
If I'm not mistaken, the reason I can't currently pass the total is because of something I read on here: the PHP is run on the server while the JavaScript runs on the user's end. My options are thus to send the total in the form (possibly as a hidden variable, which I can't figure out either), pass it along in Ajax (I don't know if the server I'm on is capable of this- possibly so and it's all use error!), or use an XMLHttpRequest. I've tried anything I could find on any of those and either do not have the right variable listed inside, am placing it in the wrong spot, or it's just plain wrong.
As I mentioned, I've poured over the forums for everything I can that's related to this and nothing I've found is specific enough for the tiny bit of understanding I have. Among other things I've tried: Pass a javascript variable value into input type hidden value and Pass Javascript Variable to PHP POST along with using an XMLHttpRequest, using Ajax, passing it as a hidden variable (which I'm leaning towards but don't think I'm implementing correctly) and a ton more- it's pretty much all I did all day at work yesterday so I'm not trying to be redundant with my question- I just can't figure out where I'm going wrong.
It looks like you hit upon it right here:
send the total in the form (possibly as a hidden variable)
Since you're talking about one page posting to another page, and that other page showing the results, then there's no need for AJAX here. You can just use a form value like any other. The "hidden variable" in this case is actually an input element:
<input type="hidden" name="sum" />
In your JavaScript where you're displaying the sum on the first page:
$("#output").html(sum);
You can also set that sum to the form element's value:
$("#output").html(sum);
$("input[name=sum]").val(sum);
As long as that input is inside the same form as the other input elements (like formSelected and formAddons) then when the first page posts to the second page, the code in the second page can access the sum value the same way:
$_POST["sum"]
In your form you should add a hidden input like this :
<input type="hidden" name="sum" value="">
Then in your recalculate() (javasript) function, you should change the value of this input once you calculated everything :
function recalculate() {
var sum = 0;
$("input[type=checkbox]:checked").each(function() {
sum += parseInt($(this).attr("rel"));
});
$("#output").html(sum);
// Change the hidden input value
$("input[name='sum']").val(sum);
}
Now, when your form is submitted, you should access the sum value, server side (PHP), with a simple :
$sum = $_POST['sum'];