Populating an input from two drop-downs with Jquery - javascript

So I've got an input field that I'm trying to populate using two separate drop-down menus. I've got it working with a single drop-down currently, but I'm unable to do two. Here's an example of what I'm trying to accomplish:
<select type="text" id="make">
<option value="">- select one -</option>
<option value="chevy">Chevy</option>
</select>
<select type="text" id="model">
<option value="">- select one -</option>
<option value="silverado">Silverado</option>
</select>
<input type="text" id="input" value="" />
So the value of the text input should be 'Chevy Silverado' if both fields are selected. Here's the script that I've got so far:
$(function(){
$('select#make').bind('change', function(){
$('input#input').val($(this).val());
});
});
Which works great for one drop down, but obviously does nothing for the other. Any ideas? I've tried a few solutions that I'd found with absolutely no success. Thanks for looking!
Big thanks to those of you who answered my question! With your guidance I was able to get the below code working for me perfectly. Note that I DID add an additional class to my select boxes
$(function(){
var $makemodel = $('.makemodel');
$('.makemodel').on('change',function(){
$('#input').val($makemodel.eq(0).val()+' '+$makemodel.eq(1).val());
});
});

No problem! Please forgive the length of this answer, it offers multiple options depending on whether you place greater importance on code readability vs efficiency. It will only make marginal differences in speed but hopefully it shall inspire you to think of speed in your overall code!
Easy solution:
$('#make,#model').on('change',function(){
$('#input').val($('#make').val()+' '+$('#model').val());
});
More efficient:
Give your selects a class:
<select type="text" id="make" class="MakeModel">
<option value="">- select one -</option>
<option value="chevy">Chevy</option>
</select>
<select type="text" id="model" class="MakeModel">
<option value="">- select one -</option>
<option value="silverado">Silverado</option>
</select>
<input type="text" id="input" value="" />
And then select on the class:
$('.MakeModel').on('change',function(){
$('#input').val($('#make').val()+' '+$('#model').val());
});
Giving it a class just makes it slightly easier for the parser to query only one selector rather than two.
Most efficient:
Use the appropriate .eq() values and caching instead of querying the ID selectors again:
var $makemodel = $('.MakeModel');
$makemodel.on('change',function(){
$('#input').val($makemodel.eq(0).val()+' '+$makemodel.eq(1).val());
});
This means the select items do not need to be requeried since all the objects of .MakeModel are contained within the function under the cached $makemodel and you can just specify the object order number to reference a specific one.
jsFiddle to show what I mean here
Additional notes:
Notice the use of .on rather than .bind, which is the more correct syntax for modern jQuery applications.
Also, using tagnames before ID or class will actually make your selectors less efficient, as the parser needs to verify the ID/class is associated with the tag, rather than just grabbing the ID (which should be unique anyway) or class name (which should be appropriately isolated in its naming).

Simple solution:
$(function() {
$('#make, #model').on('change', function() {
var makeCurr = $('#make').find(":selected");
var madelCurr = $('#model').find(":selected");
var make = (makeCurr.val() != '') ? makeCurr.text() : '';
var model = (madelCurr.val() != '') ? madelCurr.text() : '';
$('input#input').val(make + ' ' + model);
});
});
View Example

I'd suggest amending the HTML somewhat, to group the select elements within a single parent, and binding, using on(), the change event to that element:
<form action="#" method="post">
<fieldset>
<select type="text" id="make">
<option value="">- select one -</option>
<option value="chevy">Chevy</option>
</select>
<select type="text" id="model">
<option value="">- select one -</option>
<option value="silverado">Silverado</option>
</select>
<input type="text" id="input" value="" />
</fieldset>
</form>
With the jQuery:
$('fieldset').on('change', function(){
var self = $(this);
$('#input').val(function(){
return self.find('select').map(function(){ return this.value; }).get().join(' ');
});
});
JS Fiddle demo.
Modifying further, to use a class to identify the summary element (the text-input into which the value will be inserted) reduces the reliance on known elements, and allows for more general-purpose code:
$('fieldset').on('change', function(){
var self = $(this);
self.find('.summary').val(function(){
return self.find('select').map(function(){ return this.value; }).get().join(' ');
});
});
JS Fiddle demo.
And a non-jQuery, plain-JavaScript approach to the same solution (albeit only works in those browsers that support document.querySelector()/document.querySelectorAll() and addEventListener()):
function summarise(container, what, sumClass) {
var els = container.querySelectorAll(what),
sumTo = container.querySelector(sumClass),
vals = [];
for (var i = 0, len = els.length; i < len; i++) {
vals.push(els[i].value);
}
sumTo.value = vals.join(' ').trim();
}
var fieldsets = document.querySelectorAll('fieldset');
for (var i = 0, len = fieldsets.length; i < len; i++) {
fieldsets[i].addEventListener('change', function(){
summarise(this, 'select', '.summary');
}, false);
}
JS Fiddle demo.

Related

How to get value of a dropdown list in HTML using JS? [duplicate]

How do I get the selected value from a dropdown list using JavaScript?
<form>
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
</form>
Given a select element that looks like this:
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
Running this code:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var value = e.value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
Results in:
value == 2
text == "test2"
Interactive example:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
function onChange() {
var value = e.value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
console.log(value, text);
}
e.onchange = onChange;
onChange();
<form>
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
</form>
Plain JavaScript:
var e = document.getElementById("elementId");
var value = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
jQuery:
$("#elementId :selected").text(); // The text content of the selected option
$("#elementId").val(); // The value of the selected option
AngularJS: (http://jsfiddle.net/qk5wwyct):
// HTML
<select ng-model="selectItem" ng-options="item as item.text for item in items">
</select>
<p>Text: {{selectItem.text}}</p>
<p>Value: {{selectItem.value}}</p>
// JavaScript
$scope.items = [{
value: 'item_1_id',
text: 'Item 1'
}, {
value: 'item_2_id',
text: 'Item 2'
}];
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
This is correct and should give you the value.
Is it the text you're after?
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
So you're clear on the terminology:
<select>
<option value="hello">Hello World</option>
</select>
This option has:
Index = 0
Value = hello
Text = Hello World
The following code exhibits various examples related to getting/putting of values from input/select fields using JavaScript.
Source Link
Working Javascript & jQuery Demo
<select id="Ultra" onchange="run()"> <!--Call run() function-->
<option value="0">Select</option>
<option value="8">text1</option>
<option value="5">text2</option>
<option value="4">text3</option>
</select><br><br>
TextBox1<br>
<input type="text" id="srt" placeholder="get value on option select"><br>
TextBox2<br>
<input type="text" id="rtt" placeholder="Write Something !" onkeyup="up()">
The following script is getting the value of the selected option and putting it in text box 1
<script>
function run() {
document.getElementById("srt").value = document.getElementById("Ultra").value;
}
</script>
The following script is getting a value from a text box 2 and alerting with its value
<script>
function up() {
//if (document.getElementById("srt").value != "") {
var dop = document.getElementById("srt").value;
//}
alert(dop);
}
</script>
The following script is calling a function from a function
<script>
function up() {
var dop = document.getElementById("srt").value;
pop(dop); // Calling function pop
}
function pop(val) {
alert(val);
}?
</script>
var selectedValue = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy").value;
If you ever run across code written purely for Internet Explorer you might see this:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var strUser = e.options(e.selectedIndex).value;
Running the above in Firefox et al will give you an 'is not a function' error, because Internet Explorer allows you to get away with using () instead of []:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
The correct way is to use square brackets.
Use:
<select id="Ultra" onchange="alert(this.value)">
<option value="0">Select</option>
<option value="8">text1</option>
<option value="5">text2</option>
<option value="4">text3</option>
</select>
Any input/form field can use a “this” keyword when you are accessing it from inside the element. This eliminates the need for locating a form in the DOM tree and then locating this element inside the form.
There are two ways to get this done either using JavaScript or jQuery.
JavaScript:
var getValue = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy').selectedOptions[0].value;
alert (getValue); // This will output the value selected.
OR
var ddlViewBy = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy');
var value = ddlViewBy.options[ddlViewBy.selectedIndex].value;
var text = ddlViewBy.options[ddlViewBy.selectedIndex].text;
alert (value); // This will output the value selected
alert (text); // This will output the text of the value selected
jQuery:
$("#ddlViewBy:selected").text(); // Text of the selected value
$("#ddlViewBy").val(); // Outputs the value of the ID in 'ddlViewBy'
Beginners are likely to want to access values from a select with the NAME attribute rather than ID attribute. We know all form elements need names, even before they get ids.
So, I'm adding the getElementsByName() solution just for new developers to see too.
NB. names for form elements will need to be unique for your form to be usable once posted, but the DOM can allow a name be shared by more than one element. For that reason consider adding IDs to forms if you can, or be explicit with form element names my_nth_select_named_x and my_nth_text_input_named_y.
Example using getElementsByName:
var e = document.getElementsByName("my_select_with_name_ddlViewBy")[0];
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
Just use
$('#SelectBoxId option:selected').text(); for getting the text as listed
$('#SelectBoxId').val(); for getting the selected index value
I don't know if I'm the one that doesn't get the question right, but this just worked for me:
Use an onchange() event in your HTML, for example.
<select id="numberToSelect" onchange="selectNum()">
<option value="1">One</option>
<option value="2">Two</option>
<option value="3">Three</option>
</select>
JavaScript
function selectNum() {
var strUser = document.getElementById("numberToSelect").value;
}
This will give you whatever value is on the select dropdown per click.
Using jQuery:
$('select').val();
The previous answers still leave room for improvement because of the possibilities, the intuitiveness of the code, and the use of id versus name. One can get a read-out of three data of a selected option -- its index number, its value and its text. This simple, cross-browser code does all three:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Demo GetSelectOptionData</title>
</head>
<body>
<form name="demoForm">
<select name="demoSelect" onchange="showData()">
<option value="zilch">Select:</option>
<option value="A">Option 1</option>
<option value="B">Option 2</option>
<option value="C">Option 3</option>
</select>
</form>
<p id="firstP"> </p>
<p id="secondP"> </p>
<p id="thirdP"> </p>
<script>
function showData() {
var theSelect = demoForm.demoSelect;
var firstP = document.getElementById('firstP');
var secondP = document.getElementById('secondP');
var thirdP = document.getElementById('thirdP');
firstP.innerHTML = ('This option\'s index number is: ' + theSelect.selectedIndex + ' (Javascript index numbers start at 0)');
secondP.innerHTML = ('Its value is: ' + theSelect[theSelect.selectedIndex].value);
thirdP.innerHTML = ('Its text is: ' + theSelect[theSelect.selectedIndex].text);
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
Live demo: http://jsbin.com/jiwena/1/edit?html,output .
id should be used for make-up purposes. For functional form purposes, name is still valid, also in HTML5, and should still be used. Lastly, mind the use of square versus round brackets in certain places. As was explained before, only (older versions of) Internet Explorer will accept round ones in all places.
Another solution is:
document.getElementById('elementId').selectedOptions[0].value
The simplest way to do this is:
var value = document.getElementById("selectId").value;
You can use querySelector.
E.g.
var myElement = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy');
var myValue = myElement.querySelector('[selected]').value;
Running example of how it works:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var val1 = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
var txt = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
document.write("<br />Selected option Value: "+ val1);
document.write("<br />Selected option Text: "+ txt);
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2">test2</option>
<option value="3" selected="selected">test3</option>
</select>
Note: The values don't change as the dropdown is changed, if you require that functionality then an onClick change is to be implemented.
To go along with the previous answers, this is how I do it as a one-liner. This is for getting the actual text of the selected option. There are good examples for getting the index number already. (And for the text, I just wanted to show this way)
let selText = document.getElementById('elementId').options[document.getElementById('elementId').selectedIndex].text
In some rare instances you may need to use parentheses, but this would be very rare.
let selText = (document.getElementById('elementId')).options[(document.getElementById('elementId')).selectedIndex].text;
I doubt this processes any faster than the two line version. I simply like to consolidate my code as much as possible.
Unfortunately this still fetches the element twice, which is not ideal. A method that only grabs the element once would be more useful, but I have not figured that out yet, in regards to doing this with one line of code.
I have a bit different view of how to achieve this. I'm usually doing this with the following approach (it is an easier way and works with every browser as far as I know):
<select onChange="functionToCall(this.value);" id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="value1">Text one</option>
<option value="value2">Text two</option>
<option value="value3">Text three</option>
<option value="valueN">Text N</option>
</select>
In 2015, in Firefox, the following also works.
e.options.selectedIndex
In more modern browsers, querySelector allows us to retrieve the selected option in one statement, using the :checked pseudo-class. From the selected option, we can gather whatever information we need:
const opt = document.querySelector('#ddlViewBy option:checked');
// opt is now the selected option, so
console.log(opt.value, 'is the selected value');
console.log(opt.text, "is the selected option's text");
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
event.target.value inside the onChange callback did the trick for me.
Most answers here get the value of the "this" select menu onchange by a plain text JavaScript selector.
For example:
document.getElementById("ddlViewBy").value;
This is not a DRY approach.
DRY (three lines of code):
function handleChange(e) {
let innerText = e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
let value = e.target.value;
/* Do something with these values */
}
Get the first select option:
console.log(e.target[0]); /* Output: <option value="value_hello">Hello innerText</option>*/
With this idea in mind, we dynamically return a "this" select option item (by selectedIndex):
e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
Demo
let log = document.getElementById('log');
function handleChange(e) {
let innerText = e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
let value = e.target.value;
log.innerHTML = `<table>
<tr><th>value</th><th>innerText</th></tr>
<tr><td>${value}</td><td>${innerText}</td></tr>
</table>`;
}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/milligram/1.4.1/milligram.css">
<select id="greet" onchange="handleChange(event)">
<option value="value_hello">Hello innerText</option>
<option value="value_goodbye">Goodbye innerText</option>
<option value="value_seeYou">See you... innerText</option>
</select>
<select id="other_select_menu" onchange="handleChange(event)">
<option value="value_paris">Paris innerText</option>
<option value="value_ny">New York innerText</option>
</select>
<div id="log"></div>
Here is a JavaScript code line:
var x = document.form1.list.value;
Assuming that the dropdown menu named list name="list" and included in a form with name attribute name="form1".
I think you can attach an event listener to the select tag itself e.g:
<script>
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", (_) => {
document.querySelector("select").addEventListener("change", (e) => {
console.log(e.target.value);
});
});
</script>
In this scenario, you should make sure you have a value attribute for all of your options, and they are not null.
You should be using querySelector to achieve this. This also standardizes the way of getting a value from form elements.
var dropDownValue = document.querySelector('#ddlViewBy').value;
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/3t80pubr/
Try
ddlViewBy.value // value
ddlViewBy.selectedOptions[0].text // label
console.log( ddlViewBy.value );
console.log( ddlViewBy.selectedOptions[0].text );
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">Happy</option>
<option value="2">Tree</option>
<option value="3" selected="selected">Friends</option>
</select>
Here's an easy way to do it in an onchange function:
event.target.options[event.target.selectedIndex].dataset.name
<select name="test" id="test" >
<option value="1" full-name="Apple">A</option>
<option value="2" full-name="Ball">B</option>
<option value="3" full-name="Cat" selected>C</option>
</select>
var obj = document.getElementById('test');
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].value; //3
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].text; //C
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].getAttribute('full-name'); //Cat
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].selected; //true
There is a workaround, using the EasyUI framework with all of its plugins.
You only need to add some EasyUI object that can read from an input as a "bridge" to the drop-down menu.
Example: easyui-searchbox
To the left, the drop-down, to the right, the easyui-searchbox:
...
<input id="ss" class="easyui-searchbox" style="width:300px"
data-options=" searcher:my_function,
prompt:'Enter value',
menu:'#mm'">
<div id="mm" style="width:200px">
<div data-options="name:'1'">test1</div>
<div data-options="name:'2'">test2</div>
</div>
...
...
<script type="text/javascript">
function my_js_function(triggeredByButton = false){
// normal text of the searchbox (what you entered)
var value = $("#ss").searchbox("getValue");
// what you chose from the drop-down menu
var name = $("#ss").searchbox("getName");
...
Mind: the var name is the '1' or '2', that is, the "value of the drop-down", while var value is the value that was entered in the easyui-searchbox instead and not relevant if you only want to know the value of the drop-down.
I checked how EasyUI fetches that #mm name, and I could not find out how to get that name without the help of EasyUI. The jQuery behind getName:
getName:function(jq){
return $.data(jq[0],"searchbox").searchbox.find("input.textbox-value").attr("name");
}
Mind that the return of this function is not the value of the easyui-searchbox, but the name of the #mm drop-down that was used as the menu parameter of the easyui-searchbox. Somehow EasyUI must get that other value, therefore it must be possible.
If you do not want any plugin to be seen, make it as tiny as possible? Or find perhaps a plugin that does not need a form at all in the link above, I just did not take the time.

Not able to reflect mysql query on server side through ajax in original HTML file (client side) [duplicate]

How do I get the selected value from a dropdown list using JavaScript?
<form>
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
</form>
Given a select element that looks like this:
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
Running this code:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var value = e.value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
Results in:
value == 2
text == "test2"
Interactive example:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
function onChange() {
var value = e.value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
console.log(value, text);
}
e.onchange = onChange;
onChange();
<form>
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
</form>
Plain JavaScript:
var e = document.getElementById("elementId");
var value = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
jQuery:
$("#elementId :selected").text(); // The text content of the selected option
$("#elementId").val(); // The value of the selected option
AngularJS: (http://jsfiddle.net/qk5wwyct):
// HTML
<select ng-model="selectItem" ng-options="item as item.text for item in items">
</select>
<p>Text: {{selectItem.text}}</p>
<p>Value: {{selectItem.value}}</p>
// JavaScript
$scope.items = [{
value: 'item_1_id',
text: 'Item 1'
}, {
value: 'item_2_id',
text: 'Item 2'
}];
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
This is correct and should give you the value.
Is it the text you're after?
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
So you're clear on the terminology:
<select>
<option value="hello">Hello World</option>
</select>
This option has:
Index = 0
Value = hello
Text = Hello World
The following code exhibits various examples related to getting/putting of values from input/select fields using JavaScript.
Source Link
Working Javascript & jQuery Demo
<select id="Ultra" onchange="run()"> <!--Call run() function-->
<option value="0">Select</option>
<option value="8">text1</option>
<option value="5">text2</option>
<option value="4">text3</option>
</select><br><br>
TextBox1<br>
<input type="text" id="srt" placeholder="get value on option select"><br>
TextBox2<br>
<input type="text" id="rtt" placeholder="Write Something !" onkeyup="up()">
The following script is getting the value of the selected option and putting it in text box 1
<script>
function run() {
document.getElementById("srt").value = document.getElementById("Ultra").value;
}
</script>
The following script is getting a value from a text box 2 and alerting with its value
<script>
function up() {
//if (document.getElementById("srt").value != "") {
var dop = document.getElementById("srt").value;
//}
alert(dop);
}
</script>
The following script is calling a function from a function
<script>
function up() {
var dop = document.getElementById("srt").value;
pop(dop); // Calling function pop
}
function pop(val) {
alert(val);
}?
</script>
var selectedValue = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy").value;
If you ever run across code written purely for Internet Explorer you might see this:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var strUser = e.options(e.selectedIndex).value;
Running the above in Firefox et al will give you an 'is not a function' error, because Internet Explorer allows you to get away with using () instead of []:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
The correct way is to use square brackets.
Use:
<select id="Ultra" onchange="alert(this.value)">
<option value="0">Select</option>
<option value="8">text1</option>
<option value="5">text2</option>
<option value="4">text3</option>
</select>
Any input/form field can use a “this” keyword when you are accessing it from inside the element. This eliminates the need for locating a form in the DOM tree and then locating this element inside the form.
There are two ways to get this done either using JavaScript or jQuery.
JavaScript:
var getValue = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy').selectedOptions[0].value;
alert (getValue); // This will output the value selected.
OR
var ddlViewBy = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy');
var value = ddlViewBy.options[ddlViewBy.selectedIndex].value;
var text = ddlViewBy.options[ddlViewBy.selectedIndex].text;
alert (value); // This will output the value selected
alert (text); // This will output the text of the value selected
jQuery:
$("#ddlViewBy:selected").text(); // Text of the selected value
$("#ddlViewBy").val(); // Outputs the value of the ID in 'ddlViewBy'
Beginners are likely to want to access values from a select with the NAME attribute rather than ID attribute. We know all form elements need names, even before they get ids.
So, I'm adding the getElementsByName() solution just for new developers to see too.
NB. names for form elements will need to be unique for your form to be usable once posted, but the DOM can allow a name be shared by more than one element. For that reason consider adding IDs to forms if you can, or be explicit with form element names my_nth_select_named_x and my_nth_text_input_named_y.
Example using getElementsByName:
var e = document.getElementsByName("my_select_with_name_ddlViewBy")[0];
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
Just use
$('#SelectBoxId option:selected').text(); for getting the text as listed
$('#SelectBoxId').val(); for getting the selected index value
I don't know if I'm the one that doesn't get the question right, but this just worked for me:
Use an onchange() event in your HTML, for example.
<select id="numberToSelect" onchange="selectNum()">
<option value="1">One</option>
<option value="2">Two</option>
<option value="3">Three</option>
</select>
JavaScript
function selectNum() {
var strUser = document.getElementById("numberToSelect").value;
}
This will give you whatever value is on the select dropdown per click.
Using jQuery:
$('select').val();
The previous answers still leave room for improvement because of the possibilities, the intuitiveness of the code, and the use of id versus name. One can get a read-out of three data of a selected option -- its index number, its value and its text. This simple, cross-browser code does all three:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Demo GetSelectOptionData</title>
</head>
<body>
<form name="demoForm">
<select name="demoSelect" onchange="showData()">
<option value="zilch">Select:</option>
<option value="A">Option 1</option>
<option value="B">Option 2</option>
<option value="C">Option 3</option>
</select>
</form>
<p id="firstP"> </p>
<p id="secondP"> </p>
<p id="thirdP"> </p>
<script>
function showData() {
var theSelect = demoForm.demoSelect;
var firstP = document.getElementById('firstP');
var secondP = document.getElementById('secondP');
var thirdP = document.getElementById('thirdP');
firstP.innerHTML = ('This option\'s index number is: ' + theSelect.selectedIndex + ' (Javascript index numbers start at 0)');
secondP.innerHTML = ('Its value is: ' + theSelect[theSelect.selectedIndex].value);
thirdP.innerHTML = ('Its text is: ' + theSelect[theSelect.selectedIndex].text);
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
Live demo: http://jsbin.com/jiwena/1/edit?html,output .
id should be used for make-up purposes. For functional form purposes, name is still valid, also in HTML5, and should still be used. Lastly, mind the use of square versus round brackets in certain places. As was explained before, only (older versions of) Internet Explorer will accept round ones in all places.
Another solution is:
document.getElementById('elementId').selectedOptions[0].value
The simplest way to do this is:
var value = document.getElementById("selectId").value;
You can use querySelector.
E.g.
var myElement = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy');
var myValue = myElement.querySelector('[selected]').value;
Running example of how it works:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var val1 = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
var txt = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
document.write("<br />Selected option Value: "+ val1);
document.write("<br />Selected option Text: "+ txt);
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2">test2</option>
<option value="3" selected="selected">test3</option>
</select>
Note: The values don't change as the dropdown is changed, if you require that functionality then an onClick change is to be implemented.
To go along with the previous answers, this is how I do it as a one-liner. This is for getting the actual text of the selected option. There are good examples for getting the index number already. (And for the text, I just wanted to show this way)
let selText = document.getElementById('elementId').options[document.getElementById('elementId').selectedIndex].text
In some rare instances you may need to use parentheses, but this would be very rare.
let selText = (document.getElementById('elementId')).options[(document.getElementById('elementId')).selectedIndex].text;
I doubt this processes any faster than the two line version. I simply like to consolidate my code as much as possible.
Unfortunately this still fetches the element twice, which is not ideal. A method that only grabs the element once would be more useful, but I have not figured that out yet, in regards to doing this with one line of code.
I have a bit different view of how to achieve this. I'm usually doing this with the following approach (it is an easier way and works with every browser as far as I know):
<select onChange="functionToCall(this.value);" id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="value1">Text one</option>
<option value="value2">Text two</option>
<option value="value3">Text three</option>
<option value="valueN">Text N</option>
</select>
In 2015, in Firefox, the following also works.
e.options.selectedIndex
In more modern browsers, querySelector allows us to retrieve the selected option in one statement, using the :checked pseudo-class. From the selected option, we can gather whatever information we need:
const opt = document.querySelector('#ddlViewBy option:checked');
// opt is now the selected option, so
console.log(opt.value, 'is the selected value');
console.log(opt.text, "is the selected option's text");
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
event.target.value inside the onChange callback did the trick for me.
Most answers here get the value of the "this" select menu onchange by a plain text JavaScript selector.
For example:
document.getElementById("ddlViewBy").value;
This is not a DRY approach.
DRY (three lines of code):
function handleChange(e) {
let innerText = e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
let value = e.target.value;
/* Do something with these values */
}
Get the first select option:
console.log(e.target[0]); /* Output: <option value="value_hello">Hello innerText</option>*/
With this idea in mind, we dynamically return a "this" select option item (by selectedIndex):
e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
Demo
let log = document.getElementById('log');
function handleChange(e) {
let innerText = e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
let value = e.target.value;
log.innerHTML = `<table>
<tr><th>value</th><th>innerText</th></tr>
<tr><td>${value}</td><td>${innerText}</td></tr>
</table>`;
}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/milligram/1.4.1/milligram.css">
<select id="greet" onchange="handleChange(event)">
<option value="value_hello">Hello innerText</option>
<option value="value_goodbye">Goodbye innerText</option>
<option value="value_seeYou">See you... innerText</option>
</select>
<select id="other_select_menu" onchange="handleChange(event)">
<option value="value_paris">Paris innerText</option>
<option value="value_ny">New York innerText</option>
</select>
<div id="log"></div>
Here is a JavaScript code line:
var x = document.form1.list.value;
Assuming that the dropdown menu named list name="list" and included in a form with name attribute name="form1".
I think you can attach an event listener to the select tag itself e.g:
<script>
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", (_) => {
document.querySelector("select").addEventListener("change", (e) => {
console.log(e.target.value);
});
});
</script>
In this scenario, you should make sure you have a value attribute for all of your options, and they are not null.
You should be using querySelector to achieve this. This also standardizes the way of getting a value from form elements.
var dropDownValue = document.querySelector('#ddlViewBy').value;
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/3t80pubr/
Try
ddlViewBy.value // value
ddlViewBy.selectedOptions[0].text // label
console.log( ddlViewBy.value );
console.log( ddlViewBy.selectedOptions[0].text );
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">Happy</option>
<option value="2">Tree</option>
<option value="3" selected="selected">Friends</option>
</select>
Here's an easy way to do it in an onchange function:
event.target.options[event.target.selectedIndex].dataset.name
<select name="test" id="test" >
<option value="1" full-name="Apple">A</option>
<option value="2" full-name="Ball">B</option>
<option value="3" full-name="Cat" selected>C</option>
</select>
var obj = document.getElementById('test');
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].value; //3
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].text; //C
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].getAttribute('full-name'); //Cat
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].selected; //true
There is a workaround, using the EasyUI framework with all of its plugins.
You only need to add some EasyUI object that can read from an input as a "bridge" to the drop-down menu.
Example: easyui-searchbox
To the left, the drop-down, to the right, the easyui-searchbox:
...
<input id="ss" class="easyui-searchbox" style="width:300px"
data-options=" searcher:my_function,
prompt:'Enter value',
menu:'#mm'">
<div id="mm" style="width:200px">
<div data-options="name:'1'">test1</div>
<div data-options="name:'2'">test2</div>
</div>
...
...
<script type="text/javascript">
function my_js_function(triggeredByButton = false){
// normal text of the searchbox (what you entered)
var value = $("#ss").searchbox("getValue");
// what you chose from the drop-down menu
var name = $("#ss").searchbox("getName");
...
Mind: the var name is the '1' or '2', that is, the "value of the drop-down", while var value is the value that was entered in the easyui-searchbox instead and not relevant if you only want to know the value of the drop-down.
I checked how EasyUI fetches that #mm name, and I could not find out how to get that name without the help of EasyUI. The jQuery behind getName:
getName:function(jq){
return $.data(jq[0],"searchbox").searchbox.find("input.textbox-value").attr("name");
}
Mind that the return of this function is not the value of the easyui-searchbox, but the name of the #mm drop-down that was used as the menu parameter of the easyui-searchbox. Somehow EasyUI must get that other value, therefore it must be possible.
If you do not want any plugin to be seen, make it as tiny as possible? Or find perhaps a plugin that does not need a form at all in the link above, I just did not take the time.

Simple Javascript / html to alert [duplicate]

How do I get the selected value from a dropdown list using JavaScript?
<form>
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
</form>
Given a select element that looks like this:
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
Running this code:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var value = e.value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
Results in:
value == 2
text == "test2"
Interactive example:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
function onChange() {
var value = e.value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
console.log(value, text);
}
e.onchange = onChange;
onChange();
<form>
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
</form>
Plain JavaScript:
var e = document.getElementById("elementId");
var value = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
var text = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
jQuery:
$("#elementId :selected").text(); // The text content of the selected option
$("#elementId").val(); // The value of the selected option
AngularJS: (http://jsfiddle.net/qk5wwyct):
// HTML
<select ng-model="selectItem" ng-options="item as item.text for item in items">
</select>
<p>Text: {{selectItem.text}}</p>
<p>Value: {{selectItem.value}}</p>
// JavaScript
$scope.items = [{
value: 'item_1_id',
text: 'Item 1'
}, {
value: 'item_2_id',
text: 'Item 2'
}];
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
This is correct and should give you the value.
Is it the text you're after?
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
So you're clear on the terminology:
<select>
<option value="hello">Hello World</option>
</select>
This option has:
Index = 0
Value = hello
Text = Hello World
The following code exhibits various examples related to getting/putting of values from input/select fields using JavaScript.
Source Link
Working Javascript & jQuery Demo
<select id="Ultra" onchange="run()"> <!--Call run() function-->
<option value="0">Select</option>
<option value="8">text1</option>
<option value="5">text2</option>
<option value="4">text3</option>
</select><br><br>
TextBox1<br>
<input type="text" id="srt" placeholder="get value on option select"><br>
TextBox2<br>
<input type="text" id="rtt" placeholder="Write Something !" onkeyup="up()">
The following script is getting the value of the selected option and putting it in text box 1
<script>
function run() {
document.getElementById("srt").value = document.getElementById("Ultra").value;
}
</script>
The following script is getting a value from a text box 2 and alerting with its value
<script>
function up() {
//if (document.getElementById("srt").value != "") {
var dop = document.getElementById("srt").value;
//}
alert(dop);
}
</script>
The following script is calling a function from a function
<script>
function up() {
var dop = document.getElementById("srt").value;
pop(dop); // Calling function pop
}
function pop(val) {
alert(val);
}?
</script>
var selectedValue = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy").value;
If you ever run across code written purely for Internet Explorer you might see this:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var strUser = e.options(e.selectedIndex).value;
Running the above in Firefox et al will give you an 'is not a function' error, because Internet Explorer allows you to get away with using () instead of []:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
The correct way is to use square brackets.
Use:
<select id="Ultra" onchange="alert(this.value)">
<option value="0">Select</option>
<option value="8">text1</option>
<option value="5">text2</option>
<option value="4">text3</option>
</select>
Any input/form field can use a “this” keyword when you are accessing it from inside the element. This eliminates the need for locating a form in the DOM tree and then locating this element inside the form.
There are two ways to get this done either using JavaScript or jQuery.
JavaScript:
var getValue = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy').selectedOptions[0].value;
alert (getValue); // This will output the value selected.
OR
var ddlViewBy = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy');
var value = ddlViewBy.options[ddlViewBy.selectedIndex].value;
var text = ddlViewBy.options[ddlViewBy.selectedIndex].text;
alert (value); // This will output the value selected
alert (text); // This will output the text of the value selected
jQuery:
$("#ddlViewBy:selected").text(); // Text of the selected value
$("#ddlViewBy").val(); // Outputs the value of the ID in 'ddlViewBy'
Beginners are likely to want to access values from a select with the NAME attribute rather than ID attribute. We know all form elements need names, even before they get ids.
So, I'm adding the getElementsByName() solution just for new developers to see too.
NB. names for form elements will need to be unique for your form to be usable once posted, but the DOM can allow a name be shared by more than one element. For that reason consider adding IDs to forms if you can, or be explicit with form element names my_nth_select_named_x and my_nth_text_input_named_y.
Example using getElementsByName:
var e = document.getElementsByName("my_select_with_name_ddlViewBy")[0];
var strUser = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
Just use
$('#SelectBoxId option:selected').text(); for getting the text as listed
$('#SelectBoxId').val(); for getting the selected index value
I don't know if I'm the one that doesn't get the question right, but this just worked for me:
Use an onchange() event in your HTML, for example.
<select id="numberToSelect" onchange="selectNum()">
<option value="1">One</option>
<option value="2">Two</option>
<option value="3">Three</option>
</select>
JavaScript
function selectNum() {
var strUser = document.getElementById("numberToSelect").value;
}
This will give you whatever value is on the select dropdown per click.
Using jQuery:
$('select').val();
The previous answers still leave room for improvement because of the possibilities, the intuitiveness of the code, and the use of id versus name. One can get a read-out of three data of a selected option -- its index number, its value and its text. This simple, cross-browser code does all three:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Demo GetSelectOptionData</title>
</head>
<body>
<form name="demoForm">
<select name="demoSelect" onchange="showData()">
<option value="zilch">Select:</option>
<option value="A">Option 1</option>
<option value="B">Option 2</option>
<option value="C">Option 3</option>
</select>
</form>
<p id="firstP"> </p>
<p id="secondP"> </p>
<p id="thirdP"> </p>
<script>
function showData() {
var theSelect = demoForm.demoSelect;
var firstP = document.getElementById('firstP');
var secondP = document.getElementById('secondP');
var thirdP = document.getElementById('thirdP');
firstP.innerHTML = ('This option\'s index number is: ' + theSelect.selectedIndex + ' (Javascript index numbers start at 0)');
secondP.innerHTML = ('Its value is: ' + theSelect[theSelect.selectedIndex].value);
thirdP.innerHTML = ('Its text is: ' + theSelect[theSelect.selectedIndex].text);
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
Live demo: http://jsbin.com/jiwena/1/edit?html,output .
id should be used for make-up purposes. For functional form purposes, name is still valid, also in HTML5, and should still be used. Lastly, mind the use of square versus round brackets in certain places. As was explained before, only (older versions of) Internet Explorer will accept round ones in all places.
Another solution is:
document.getElementById('elementId').selectedOptions[0].value
The simplest way to do this is:
var value = document.getElementById("selectId").value;
You can use querySelector.
E.g.
var myElement = document.getElementById('ddlViewBy');
var myValue = myElement.querySelector('[selected]').value;
Running example of how it works:
var e = document.getElementById("ddlViewBy");
var val1 = e.options[e.selectedIndex].value;
var txt = e.options[e.selectedIndex].text;
document.write("<br />Selected option Value: "+ val1);
document.write("<br />Selected option Text: "+ txt);
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2">test2</option>
<option value="3" selected="selected">test3</option>
</select>
Note: The values don't change as the dropdown is changed, if you require that functionality then an onClick change is to be implemented.
To go along with the previous answers, this is how I do it as a one-liner. This is for getting the actual text of the selected option. There are good examples for getting the index number already. (And for the text, I just wanted to show this way)
let selText = document.getElementById('elementId').options[document.getElementById('elementId').selectedIndex].text
In some rare instances you may need to use parentheses, but this would be very rare.
let selText = (document.getElementById('elementId')).options[(document.getElementById('elementId')).selectedIndex].text;
I doubt this processes any faster than the two line version. I simply like to consolidate my code as much as possible.
Unfortunately this still fetches the element twice, which is not ideal. A method that only grabs the element once would be more useful, but I have not figured that out yet, in regards to doing this with one line of code.
I have a bit different view of how to achieve this. I'm usually doing this with the following approach (it is an easier way and works with every browser as far as I know):
<select onChange="functionToCall(this.value);" id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="value1">Text one</option>
<option value="value2">Text two</option>
<option value="value3">Text three</option>
<option value="valueN">Text N</option>
</select>
In 2015, in Firefox, the following also works.
e.options.selectedIndex
In more modern browsers, querySelector allows us to retrieve the selected option in one statement, using the :checked pseudo-class. From the selected option, we can gather whatever information we need:
const opt = document.querySelector('#ddlViewBy option:checked');
// opt is now the selected option, so
console.log(opt.value, 'is the selected value');
console.log(opt.text, "is the selected option's text");
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">test1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">test2</option>
<option value="3">test3</option>
</select>
event.target.value inside the onChange callback did the trick for me.
Most answers here get the value of the "this" select menu onchange by a plain text JavaScript selector.
For example:
document.getElementById("ddlViewBy").value;
This is not a DRY approach.
DRY (three lines of code):
function handleChange(e) {
let innerText = e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
let value = e.target.value;
/* Do something with these values */
}
Get the first select option:
console.log(e.target[0]); /* Output: <option value="value_hello">Hello innerText</option>*/
With this idea in mind, we dynamically return a "this" select option item (by selectedIndex):
e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
Demo
let log = document.getElementById('log');
function handleChange(e) {
let innerText = e.target[e.target.options.selectedIndex].innerText;
let value = e.target.value;
log.innerHTML = `<table>
<tr><th>value</th><th>innerText</th></tr>
<tr><td>${value}</td><td>${innerText}</td></tr>
</table>`;
}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/milligram/1.4.1/milligram.css">
<select id="greet" onchange="handleChange(event)">
<option value="value_hello">Hello innerText</option>
<option value="value_goodbye">Goodbye innerText</option>
<option value="value_seeYou">See you... innerText</option>
</select>
<select id="other_select_menu" onchange="handleChange(event)">
<option value="value_paris">Paris innerText</option>
<option value="value_ny">New York innerText</option>
</select>
<div id="log"></div>
Here is a JavaScript code line:
var x = document.form1.list.value;
Assuming that the dropdown menu named list name="list" and included in a form with name attribute name="form1".
I think you can attach an event listener to the select tag itself e.g:
<script>
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", (_) => {
document.querySelector("select").addEventListener("change", (e) => {
console.log(e.target.value);
});
});
</script>
In this scenario, you should make sure you have a value attribute for all of your options, and they are not null.
You should be using querySelector to achieve this. This also standardizes the way of getting a value from form elements.
var dropDownValue = document.querySelector('#ddlViewBy').value;
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/3t80pubr/
Try
ddlViewBy.value // value
ddlViewBy.selectedOptions[0].text // label
console.log( ddlViewBy.value );
console.log( ddlViewBy.selectedOptions[0].text );
<select id="ddlViewBy">
<option value="1">Happy</option>
<option value="2">Tree</option>
<option value="3" selected="selected">Friends</option>
</select>
Here's an easy way to do it in an onchange function:
event.target.options[event.target.selectedIndex].dataset.name
<select name="test" id="test" >
<option value="1" full-name="Apple">A</option>
<option value="2" full-name="Ball">B</option>
<option value="3" full-name="Cat" selected>C</option>
</select>
var obj = document.getElementById('test');
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].value; //3
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].text; //C
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].getAttribute('full-name'); //Cat
obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].selected; //true
There is a workaround, using the EasyUI framework with all of its plugins.
You only need to add some EasyUI object that can read from an input as a "bridge" to the drop-down menu.
Example: easyui-searchbox
To the left, the drop-down, to the right, the easyui-searchbox:
...
<input id="ss" class="easyui-searchbox" style="width:300px"
data-options=" searcher:my_function,
prompt:'Enter value',
menu:'#mm'">
<div id="mm" style="width:200px">
<div data-options="name:'1'">test1</div>
<div data-options="name:'2'">test2</div>
</div>
...
...
<script type="text/javascript">
function my_js_function(triggeredByButton = false){
// normal text of the searchbox (what you entered)
var value = $("#ss").searchbox("getValue");
// what you chose from the drop-down menu
var name = $("#ss").searchbox("getName");
...
Mind: the var name is the '1' or '2', that is, the "value of the drop-down", while var value is the value that was entered in the easyui-searchbox instead and not relevant if you only want to know the value of the drop-down.
I checked how EasyUI fetches that #mm name, and I could not find out how to get that name without the help of EasyUI. The jQuery behind getName:
getName:function(jq){
return $.data(jq[0],"searchbox").searchbox.find("input.textbox-value").attr("name");
}
Mind that the return of this function is not the value of the easyui-searchbox, but the name of the #mm drop-down that was used as the menu parameter of the easyui-searchbox. Somehow EasyUI must get that other value, therefore it must be possible.
If you do not want any plugin to be seen, make it as tiny as possible? Or find perhaps a plugin that does not need a form at all in the link above, I just did not take the time.

Jquery - Grab multiple selections' data in Jquery

This originates from my original question. I'm expanding on it.
Html select options
<select id="1d" name="camp" multiple="multiple">
<option data-url0="week_1" value="Week 1">30th July</option>
<option data-url1="week_2" value="Week 2">6th August</option>
</select>
<input type="hidden" name="camp_url0" id="1e">
<input type="hidden" name="camp_url1" id="1f">
Jquery script I'm struggling with.
$("#1d").on("change", function () {
var url1 = $(this).children(":selected").data("url0");
var url2 = $(this).children(":selected").data("url1");
$("#1e").val(url0);
$("#1f").val(url1);
});
This code works beautifully (maybe not the cleanest?), except for one important issue. Even though it is a multiple selector, whenever both options are selected, only one option is marked as :selected in DOM, meaning only one data-url{row_id} is being inputted. I need both, if both are selected.
I hope that makes sense. Thanks for your help.
UPD:
Add some additional “routing” data to the html
<select id="1d" name="camp" size="5" multiple>
<option data-url="week_1" data-id="1e" value="Week 1">30th July</option>
<option data-url="week_2" data-id="1f" value="Week 2">6th August</option>
</select>
and use it
$("#1d").on("change", function () {
$('input[type=hidden]').val('');
$('option:selected', this).each(function() {
$('#' + $(this).data('id')).val($(this).data('url'))
})
})
http://jsfiddle.net/5ctDC/1/
OLD:
Just .map it and you will get an array with the data.
$('option:selected', this).map(function() {
return $(this).data('url')
})
["week_1", "week_2"]
http://jsfiddle.net/5ctDC/
Go through ALL of the selected elements:
$("#1d").on("change", function () {
var allurl1 = '', allurl2 = '';
$(this).children(":selected").each(function(){
allurl1 += $(this).data("url0");
allurl2 += $(this).data("url1");
});
$("#1e").val(allurl1);
$("#1f").val(allurl2);
});
Working Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/maniator/mtAgS/ (I made the inputs shown so you can visually see what happens)
In an unrelated note, you should'nt be using id that don't start with a letter.

2 related Multiselect form elements

I want to create 2 multiselect side by side. The first one is populated, but the 2nd is empty. The 2nd gets populated only when I select an option from the 1st one and depends on the value of the 1st one.
I'm thinking the only way to do this is with javascript. Can someone confirm this, and do you know of existing examples.
I'm using jquery, but prefer to not use plugins.
I'm also thinking to use Zend so if an existing component exists that would be great.
Here's a demo
You can easily do this with some DOM manipulation.
HTML
<select id="from" multiple>
<option value="-">King</option>
<option value="9">Queen</option>
<option value="5">Rook</option>
<option value="3">Knight</option>
<option value="3">Bishop</option>
<option value="1">pawn</option>
</select>
<select id="to" multiple>
</select>
javascript
var from = document.getElementById("from");
var to = document.getElementById("to");
from.onchange = function(){
//remove this to allow for duplicates
to.innerHTML = "";
var fromOptions = from.getElementsByTagName("option");
for(var i in fromOptions) {
if (fromOptions[i].selected == true) {
//remove "cloneNode(true)" to simultaniusly
//remove the node from the from list.
to.appendChild(fromOptions[i].cloneNode(true));
}
}
}

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