All,
Have used this site a few times before and had some great replies so hopefully someone can help again. I want a set of radio buttons, so that when you click a button - you get another set below it. Then again, when you click one of the 2nd set of buttons, you'll get a third etc. Currently I have the following:
<html>
<head>
<title>My Wizard</title>
<script language="javascript">
function Display(question) {
h1=document.getElementById("yes");
h2=document.getElementById("no");
h3=document.getElementById("dk");
h4=document.getElementById("yes2");
if (question=="yes") h1.style.display="block";
else h1.style.display="none";
if (question=="no") h2.style.display="block";
else h2.style.display="none";
if (question=="dk") h3.style.display="block";
else h3.style.display="none";
if (question=="yes2") h4.style.display="block";
else h4.style.display="none";
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<hr>
<form name="form1">
<p>Do you like the colour blue?</p>
<input type="radio" name="type" value="yes" checked
onClick="Display('yes');">
Yes
<input type="radio" name="type" value="no"
onClick="Display('no');">
No
<input type="radio" name="type" value="dk"
onClick="Display('dk');">
Don't know
<br>
<div ID="yes" style="display:none;">
<hr>
<p>Do you like the colour red?</p>
<input type="radio" name="type" value="yes2" checked
onClick="Display('yes2')">
Yes
<input type="radio" name="type" value="no2"
onClick="Display('no2');">
No
</div>
<div ID="yes2" style="display:none">
I want this to appear beneath the 2nd set of buttons, not replacing it!
</div>
<div ID="no2" style="display:none">
test2
</div>
<div ID="no" style="display:none">
<b>this is my no box:</b>
<input type="text" name="no" size="25">
</div>
<div ID="dk" style="display:none">
<b>dk:</b>
<input type="text" name="dk" size="15">
</div>
</form>
</body>
</html>
So basically, i'm trying to make a little wizard - so something that will ask the user a question, and based on this - it will ask them another. I dont want to use server side applications so am trying something simple like this - but whenever the user selects an option from the 2nd set of buttons, the text which goes with it replaces the 2nd set of buttons. What am i doing wrong?
Please select 'yes' and 'yes' again to see what i mean. Any help will be appreciated!
Joe
Radio input elements are grouped by their name attribute. You should assign a different name to the other sets of radio input elements.
Visual example:
[x] name=favColor [ ] name=favRed
[ ] name=favColor [x] name=favRed
[ ] name=favColor [ ] name-favRed
See also: https://developer.mozilla.org/en/HTML/Element/input
Your if statement is wrong. You ask again and again this: if (question=="yes") h1.style.display="block";
else h1.style.display="none"; and the second time if is not true, so you set the h1 to be hidden.
here is one solution:
<html>
<head>
<title>My Wizard</title>
<script language="javascript">
function Display(question, i) {
h1=document.getElementById("yes");
h2=document.getElementById("no");
h3=document.getElementById("dk");
h4=document.getElementById("yes2");
if(i==1){
if (question=="yes") h1.style.display="block";
else h1.style.display="none";
if (question=="no") h2.style.display="block";
else h2.style.display="none";
}else if(i==2){
if (question=="dk") h3.style.display="block";
else h3.style.display="none";
if (question=="yes2") h4.style.display="block";
else h4.style.display="none";
}
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<hr>
<form name="form1">
<p>Do you like the colour blue?</p>
<input type="radio" name="type" value="yes" checked
onClick="Display('yes', 1);">
Yes
<input type="radio" name="type" value="no"
onClick="Display('no', 1);">
No
<input type="radio" name="type" value="dk"
onClick="Display('dk', 1);">
Don't know
<br>
<div ID="yes" style="display:none;">
<hr>
<p>Do you like the colour red?</p>
<input type="radio" name="type" value="yes2" checked
onClick="Display('yes2', 2)">
Yes
<input type="radio" name="type" value="no2"
onClick="Display('no2', 2);">
No
</div>
<div ID="yes2" style="display:none">
I want this to appear beneath the 2nd set of buttons, not replacing it!
</div>
<div ID="no2" style="display:none">
test2
</div>
<div ID="no" style="display:none">
<b>this is my no box:</b>
<input type="text" name="no" size="25">
</div>
<div ID="dk" style="display:none">
<b>dk:</b>
<input type="text" name="dk" size="15">
</div>
</form>
</body>
</html>
Related
I have a problem with checking only one checkbox... I tried two types of JS code.. But it doesn't work... To check by class, when u click on one element with class 'product-list' to deselect another... Have someone idea how to solve this?
HTML:
<div class="mg-toolbar">
<div class="mg-option checkbox-custom checkbox-inline">
<input class="product-list" type="checkbox" name="PDF" value="<?php echo $file_name; ?>">
<label for="file_1">SELECT</label>
</div>
</div>
JS Try 1:
<script type="text/javascript">
$('.product-list').click(function() {
$(this).siblings('input:checkbox').prop('checked', false);
);
</script>
JS Try 2:
<script type="text/javascript">
$('.product-list').on('change', function() {
$('.product-list').not(this).prop('checked', false);
});
</script>
If you want to ensure that only one item to be selected at once, then actually that's what radio buttons were invented for (rather than checkboxes). And you don't need any JS code to make that work.
Demo:
<div class="mg-toolbar">
<div class="mg-option checkbox-custom checkbox-inline">
<input class="product-list" id="file_1" type="radio" name="PDF" value="File1">
<label for="file_1">SELECT 1</label>
</div>
<div class="mg-option checkbox-custom checkbox-inline">
<input class="product-list" id="file_2" type="radio" name="PDF" value="File2">
<label for="file_2">SELECT 2</label>
</div>
<div class="mg-option checkbox-custom checkbox-inline">
<input class="product-list" id="file_3" type="radio" name="PDF" value="File3">
<label for="file_3">SELECT 3</label>
</div>
<div class="mg-option checkbox-custom checkbox-inline">
<input class="product-list" id="file_4" type="radio" name="PDF" value="File4">
<label for="file_4">SELECT 4</label>
</div>
</div>
change the #c01 and #c02 to the two check box ID's your doing this with.
I think this may do what you need it to do. If c01 checked, c02 is unchecked, and vice-versa
$("#c01").click(function(){
if($("#c01").is(':checked'))
$("#c02").prop("checked", false);
});
$("#c02").click(function(){
if($("#c02").is(':checked'))
$("#c01").prop("checked", false);
});
I am trying to re-direct my code to another page but for some reason It wont allow me too. I have the exact page name but it will not re-direct to that page or any page for that matter. My code is dependant on a user select a radio button that displays either yes or no. Please advise on what my errors are. Thanks
<script type="text/javascript">
function idForm()
{
if(document.getElementById('No').checked) {
alert("Please book a meeting room, before organising catering.");
}
if (document.getElementById('Yes').checked)
{
window.location.href = "homePage.php";
}
}
</script>
<body>
<div id=""> <img src="" alt="" style="">
</div>
<div class="verify" style="margin:0 auto;">
<form name="form1" action="" onsubmit="idForm()" method="post">
<!-- Booking Filter -->
<h1>HAVE YOU BOOKED A MEETING ROOM PRIOR TO ORGANISING CATERING?</h1>
<input type="radio" id="Yes" name="agree" value="Yes"> Yes
<input type="radio" id="No" name="agree" value="No"> No<br> <br> <br>
<input type="submit" class="space" name="Submit" value="Submit">
</form>
</div>
window.location.href is a property not a method. just assign it.
window.location.href = "homePage.php";
I am having problems trying to pass values to two different forms on the same page. The page is populated with 16 radio buttons (which I’ve turned into boxes for display reasons) and they all hold a value (e.g. 001). Both of the forms jobs are to somehow grab the active/selected radio button value and post it to a PHP file so database changes can be made. Instead of a submit button, I am using an anchor to pass a JavaScript submit function. I have tried having
both forms cover the whole page but still didn't have any luck.
I’ll post some code below to help you understand.
PS. If you need more code to understand, I can post it to pastebin.
<li>
<form id="form_ready" method="post" action="../backend/screen.php">
<input type="hidden" name="screenid" value="" />
<input type="hidden" name="status" value="" />
<input type="hidden" name="pickupid" value="document.activeElement.value;" />
<a onclick="document.getElementById('form_ready').submit();">READY</a>
</form>
</li>
<li>
<form id="form_c" method="post" action="../backend/screen.php">
<input type="hidden" name="status" value="" />
<input type="hidden" name="pickupid" value="document.activeElement.value;" />
<a onclick="document.getElementById('form_c').submit();">COLLECTED</a>
</form>
</li>
</ul>
<div id="content">
<div id="container">
<div id="table">
<div id="tr1">
<div id="td1">
<input type="radio" name="pickup" id="1" value="001" />
<label for="1"> <span>001</span> </label>
</div>
<div id="td2">
<input type="radio" name="pickup" id="2" value="002" />
<label for="2"> <span>002</span> </label>
</div>
<div id="td3">
<input type="radio" name="pickup" id="3" value="003" />
<label for="3"> <span>003</span> </label>
</div>
<div id="td4">
<input type="radio" name="pickup" id="4" value="004" />
<label for="4"> <span>004</span> </label>
</div>
To answer the suggestion in the comments and use only one form, here's how to grab the value from the selected radio button:
var inputs = document.getElementsByTagName('input');
var valueSelected;
for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; i++) {
if (inputs[i].checked) valueSelected = inputs[i].value;
}
valueSelected will contain the value of the selected radio.
If you ever need to reduce the type to "radio" only for some reason, you can check an input type with inputs[i]['type'] === 'radio' in the for loop.
The best would probably still be to set a class for your "radio" inputs, it will allow the loop to be more specific, hence a more efficient code, for example:
<input type="radio" class="myRadio">
and in JS: var inputs = document.getElementsByClassName('myRadio');
So I am using the PrintThis JQuery plugin in order to print a form field, but for some reason I am unable to have the plugin print out any changes made to the checkboxes. When I click "Print", the only checkbox that appears to change is one that has a "checked" property by default. Any ideas on how to fix this?
HTML:
<body>
<div id="print">
<form>
<input id="option" type="checkbox" checked>
<label class="checkbox" for="option"> You are 18 years or older</label>
<br><br>
<input id="option2" type="checkbox">
<label class="checkbox" for="option2"> You have tested positive for something in your blood</label>
<br><br>
<input id="option3" type="checkbox">
<label class="checkbox" for="option3"> You have health-related kidney problems</label>
<br><br>
<input id="option4" type="checkbox">
<label class="checkbox" for="option4"> You have health-related skin problems</label>
<br><br>
<input id="option5" type="checkbox">
<label class="checkbox" for="option5"> You have a low platelet count</label>
</form>
</div>
<br>
<br>
<input id="printButton" type="button" value="Click here to download and print this checklist to review with your doctor." />
</body>
JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/Hybridx24/bxtpv26x/
Not sure what the problem might be here, but you can get around it by explicitly setting the checked attribute for the checkboxes that are checked.
$("input:button").click(function () {
$('input[type="checkbox"]').each(function() {
var $this = $(this);
if($this.is(':checked')) {
$this.attr('checked', true);
} else {
$this.removeAttr('checked');
}
});
$("#print").printThis({'importStyle': true});
});
Check Fiddle
So after skimming through the plugin's source. Looks like there's a property for form values. I added it in and it seems to work.
$('#selector').printThis({formValues:true});
http://jsfiddle.net/wzp0e9r9/
Hey everyone I got a javascript problem I can't seem to find a specific solution for on the web. What I want to be able to do is select one of the radio buttons and have that change the class of #home-right to either .rackmount or .shipping and add the class of .displaynone to the type of dimensions I don't want shown.
<div id="home-right" class="rackmount">
<h4 class="helvneuebcn">Case Finder</h4>
<div class="cta-options">
<input type="radio" value="Shipping and Storage" name="" checked> Shipping and Storage<br/>
<input type="radio" value="Rackmount Enclosures" name=""> Rackmount Enclosures<br/>
</div>
<div class="shipping-dimensions displaynone">
<div class="dimensions"><input type="text" class="size"><span class="helvneuemd">H x </span></div>
<div class="dimensions"><input type="text" class="size"><span class="helvneuemd">W x </span></div>
<div class="dimensions"><input type="text" class="size"><span class="helvneuemd">L</span></div>
</div>
<div class="rackmount-dimensions">
<div class="dimensions"><input type="text" class="size"><span class="helvneuemd">U Height x </span></div>
<div class="dimensions"><input type="text" class="size"><span class="helvneuemd">Rack Depth</span></div>
</div>
<div class="clear"></div>
<input type="button" value="Submit" class="findcase">
</div>
Use a onClick handler on your radio buttons to do your stuff. Example:
<input onCLick="..." type="radio" value="Shipping and Storage" name="" checked> Shipping and Storage<br/>
Also use jQuery if you ain't already - it will save you some time and its very easy to do this kind of functionality.