I have two radio buttons that are YES (value=1) and NO (value=0), I'm using the following code to show a hidden division when you click on YES:
$("#regaddress").change(function(){
if ($(this).val() == "1" ) {
$("#registeredaddress").slideDown("fast"); //Slide Down Effect
} else {
$("#registeredaddress").slideUp("fast"); //Slide Up Effect
}
});
Code for Radio Buttons:
<input name="regaddress" id="regaddress" type="radio" value="1">Yes
<input name="regaddress" id="regaddress" type="radio" value="0" checked> No
What I need is the code to hide that division when you click NO. Should be a simple answer for some of you, but personally feel like banging my head against a wall this afternoon trying to work out how to hide it!
That's easy enough, because you posted no id or name attributes in your original question, I've abstracted it out to the following:
html
<form action="" method="post">
<fieldset>
<input type="radio" value="0" name="state" id="no" />
<label for="no">No</label>
<input type="radio" value="1" name="state" id="yes" />
<label for="yes">Yes</label>
</fieldset>
</form>
<div id="hidden">This div is hidden</div>
jQuery
$(document).ready(
function(){
$('input:radio[name=state]').change(
function(){
if ($(this).val()==1) {
$('#hidden').show();
}
else {
$('#hidden').hide();
}
}
);
});
Demo of the above posted at JS Fiddle.
Amended slightly to take into account the slideUp() and slideDown() usage:
$(document).ready(
function(){
$('input:radio[name=state]').change(
function(){
if ($(this).val()==1) {
$('#hidden').slideDown(1000).text('This div is no longer hidden.');
}
else {
$('#hidden').slideUp(1000).text('This div is now hidden.');
}
}
);
});
Demo at JS Fiddle.
Final edit to take into account your id and name attributes:
$(document).ready(
function(){
$('input:radio[name=regaddress]').change(
function(){
if ($(this).val()==1) {
$('#registeredaddress').slideDown(1000).text('This div is no longer hidden.');
}
else {
$('#registeredaddress').slideUp(1000).text('This div is now hidden.');
}
}
);
});
Demo at JS Fiddle
Also, if you're interested, I did something similar that you can use for pretty much any type of checkbox or form element. Dynamic Show Hide. It may be a little overboard for what you're doing but it's handy if you do this thing a lot since you can stick it in it's on js file and call it whenever you need it.
Related
I'm trying to enable/disable a place order button based on whether or not the terms acceptance checkbox has been checked. The script I have been working on works fine for that, but it's also triggered when a different checkbox (with a different id) is checked. Although the other checkbox enables the button, it doesn't disable it again when un-checking it. So I think it's something wrong with the 'on change' part.
I've tried everything I could find and can't make it work only when the checkbox with id 'terms' is checked:
<script>
jQuery(window).on('load',function(){
setTimeout(function(){
jQuery('#payment #place_order').attr("disabled","disabled");
},1000);
});
jQuery(document).on('change','#terms',function() {
var ischecked = document.getElementById("terms");
if(ischecked.checked == false){
jQuery('#payment #place_order').attr("disabled","disabled");
}else{
jQuery('#payment #place_order').removeAttr("disabled");
}
});
</script>
The terms checkbox is as below:
<input type="checkbox" class="woocommerce-form__input woocommerce-form__input-checkbox input-checkbox ios-switch" name="terms" id="terms">
And the other one that triggers it is as below:
<input class="woocommerce-form__input woocommerce-form__input-checkbox input-checkbox" id="createaccount" type="checkbox" name="createaccount" value="1">
Your code is not clear.
Assuming the place order has the id of #place_order, there is no need to add the container
jQuery(function() { // on page load
jQuery('#place_order').attr("disabled", "disabled");
jQuery(document).on("change", "#terms", function() { // assuming the terms is dynamically inserted
if (!this.checked) {
jQuery('#place_order').attr("disabled", "disabled");
} else {
jQuery('#place_order').removeAttr("disabled");
}
});
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
Terms <input type="checkbox" class="woocommerce-form__input woocommerce-form__input-checkbox input-checkbox ios-switch" name="terms" id="terms"><br/>
<button id="place_order">Place order</button>
<hr/>
Create account <input class="woocommerce-form__input woocommerce-form__input-checkbox input-checkbox" id="createaccount" type="checkbox" name="createaccount" value="1">
I would like to conditionally disable a button based on a radio and checkbox combination. The radio will have two options, the first is checked by default. If the user selects the second option then I would like to disable a button until at least one checkbox has been checked.
I have searched at length on CodePen and Stack Overflow but cannot find a solution that works with my conditionals. The results I did find were close but I couldn't adapt them to my needs as I am a Javascript novice.
I am using JQuery, if that helps.
If needed:
http://codepen.io/traceofwind/pen/EVNxZj
<form>
<div id="input-option1">First option: (required)
<input type="radio" name="required" id="required" value="1" checked="checked">Yes
<input type="radio" name="required" id="required" value="2">No
<div>
<div id="input-option2">Optionals:
<input type="checkbox" name="optionals" id="optionals" value="2a">Optional 1
<input type="checkbox" name="optionals" id="optionals" value="2b">Optional 2
<div>
<div id="input-option3">Extras:
<input type="checkbox" name="extra" id="extra" value="3">Extra 1
<div>
<button type="button" id="btn">Add to Cart</button>
</form>
(Please excuse the code, it is in short hand for example!)
The form element IDs are somewhat fixed. The IDs are generated by OpenCart so I believe the naming convention is set by group, rather than unique. I cannot use IDs such as radio_ID_1 and radio_ID_2, for example; this is an OpenCart framework facet and not a personal choice.
Finally, in pseudo code I am hoping someone can suggest a JQuery / javascript solution along the lines of:
if radio = '2' then
if checkboxes = unchecked then
btn = disabled
else
btn = enabled
end if
end if
Here is a quick solution and I hope that's what you were after.
$(function() {
var $form = $("#form1");
var $btn = $form.find("#btn");
var $radios = $form.find(":radio");
var $checks = $form.find(":checkbox[name='optionals']");
$radios.add($checks).on("change", function() {
var radioVal = $radios.filter(":checked").val();
$btn.prop("disabled", true);
if (radioVal == 2) {
$btn.prop("disabled", !$checks.filter(":checked").length >= 1);
} else {
$btn.prop("disabled", !radioVal);
}
});
});
Here is a demo with the above + your HTML.
Note: Remove all the IDs except the form ID, button ID (since they're used in the demo) as you can't have duplicate IDs in an HTML document. an ID is meant to identify a unique piece of content. If the idea is to style those elements, then use classes.
If you foresee a lot of JavaScript development in your future, then I would highly recommend the JavaScript courses made available by Udacity. Although the full course content is only available for a fee, the most important part of the course materials--the videos and integrated questions--are free.
However, if you don't plan to do a lot of JavaScript development in the future and just need a quick solution so you can move on, here's how to accomplish what you are trying to accomplish:
$(document).ready(function(){
$('form').on('click', 'input[type="radio"]', function(){
conditionallyToggleButton();
});
$('form').on('click', 'input[type="checkbox"]', function(){
conditionallyToggleButton();
});
});
function conditionallyToggleButton()
{
if (shouldDisableButton())
{
disableButton();
}
else
{
enableButton();
}
}
function shouldDisableButton()
{
if ($('div#input-option1 input:checked').val() == 2
&& !$('form input[type="checkbox"]:checked').length)
{
return true;
}
return false;
}
function disableButton()
{
$('button').prop('disabled', true);
}
function enableButton()
{
$('button').prop('disabled', false);
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form>
<div id="input-option1">First option: (required)
<input type="radio" name="required" id="required" value="1" checked="checked">Yes
<input type="radio" name="required" id="required" value="2">No
<div>
<div id="input-option2">Optionals:
<input type="checkbox" name="optionals" id="optionals" value="2a">Optional 1
<input type="checkbox" name="optionals" id="optionals" value="2b">Optional 2
<div>
<div id="input-option3">Extras:
<input type="checkbox" name="extra" id="extra" value="3">Extra 1
<div>
<button type="button" id="btn">Add to Cart</button>
</form>
Note that the JavaScript code above is a quick-and-dirty solution. To do it right, you would probably want to create a JavaScript class representing the add to cart form that manages the behavior of the form elements and which caches the jQuery-wrapped form elements in properties.
I have some html like this :
<p>a. Is there a skin and/or scar condition?
<br>
<input id="ucWSDBQ_CheckBox3" type="checkbox" name="ucWSDBQ$CheckBox3">
<label for="ucWSDBQ_CheckBox3"></label>Yes
<input id="ucWSDBQ_CheckBox5" type="checkbox" name="ucWSDBQ$CheckBox5">
<label for="ucWSDBQ_CheckBox5"></label>No
<br> If yes, check all that apply and complete the corresponding DBQ(s):
<br>
<input id="ucWSDBQ_CheckBox6" type="checkbox" name="ucWSDBQ$CheckBox6">
<label for="ucWSDBQ_CheckBox6"></label> <b>Skin Diseases DBQ<br> </b>
<input id="ucWSDBQ_CheckBox7" type="checkbox" name="ucWSDBQ$CheckBox7">
<label for="ucWSDBQ_CheckBox7"></label> <b> Scars DBQ</b>
</p>
I want to hide the text If yes, check all that apply and complete the corresponding when user clicks No, and show the text when user clicks Yes. I have tried different things but didn't work.
Fiddle
Look at this fiddle and see if it's what you're after.
$('form').on('click', function() {
if($('#ucWSDBQ_CheckBox3').is(':checked')) {
$('.hidden').css('display', 'block');
} else {
$('.hidden').css('display', 'none');
}
});
I've added a form and a wrapper-div to your HTML.
http://jsfiddle.net/yUu6q/10/
Handle the onClick event of the checkbox. In that you will have to write code for whatever you want to achieve
I've got the following code to trigger a click event on some radio buttons! but it doesn't get fired! can any one help me with this!
CODE :
$("#inline_content input[name='type']").click(function(){
if($('input:radio[name=type]:checked').val() == "walk_in"){
$('#select-table > .roomNumber').attr('enabled',false);
}
});
RADIO BUTTONS
<form class="type">
<input type="radio" name="type" checked="checked" value="guest">In House</input>
<input type="radio" name="type" value="walk_in">Walk In</input>
</form>.
Update
Tried onChange() too but not working.
It fires. Check demo http://jsfiddle.net/yeyene/kbAk3/
$("#inline_content input[name='type']").click(function(){
alert('You clicked radio!');
if($('input:radio[name=type]:checked').val() == "walk_in"){
alert($('input:radio[name=type]:checked').val());
//$('#select-table > .roomNumber').attr('enabled',false);
}
});
There are a couple of things wrong in this code:
You're using <input> the wrong way. You should use a <label> if you want to make the text behind it clickable.
It's setting the enabled attribute, which does not exist. Use disabled instead.
If it would be an attribute, it's value should not be false, use disabled="disabled" or simply disabled without a value.
If checking for someone clicking on a form event that will CHANGE it's value (like check-boxes and radio-buttons), use .change() instead.
I'm not sure what your code is supposed to do. My guess is that you want to disable the input field with class roomNumber once someone selects "Walk in" (and possibly re-enable when deselected). If so, try this code:
HTML:
<form class="type">
<p>
<input type="radio" name="type" checked="checked" id="guest" value="guest" />
<label for="guest">In House</label>
</p>
<p>
<input type="radio" name="type" id="walk_in" value="walk_in" />
<label for="walk_in">Walk in</label>
</p>
<p>
<input type="text" name="roomnumber" class="roomNumber" value="12345" />
</p>
</form>
Javascript:
$("form input:radio").change(function () {
if ($(this).val() == "walk_in") {
// Disable your roomnumber element here
$('.roomNumber').attr('disabled', 'disabled');
} else {
// Re-enable here I guess
$('.roomNumber').removeAttr('disabled');
}
});
I created a fiddle here: http://jsfiddle.net/k28xd/1/
Personally, for me, the best solution for a similar issue was:
HTML
<input type="radio" name="selectAll" value="true" />
<input type="radio" name="selectAll" value="false" />
JQuery
var $selectAll = $( "input:radio[name=selectAll]" );
$selectAll.on( "change", function() {
console.log( "selectAll: " + $(this).val() );
// or
alert( "selectAll: " + $(this).val() );
});
*The event "click" can work in place of "change" as well.
Hope this helps!
A different way
$("#inline_content input[name='type']").change(function () {
if ($(this).val() == "walk_in" && $(this).is(":checked")) {
$('#select-table > .roomNumber').attr('enabled', false);
}
});
Demo - http://jsfiddle.net/cB6xV/
Seems like you're #inline_content isn't there! Remove the jQuery-Selector or check the parent elements, maybe you have a typo or forgot to add the id.
(made you a jsfiddle, works after adding a parent <div id="inline_content">: http://jsfiddle.net/J5HdN/)
put ur js code under the form html or use $(document).ready(function(){}) and try this.
$('#inline_content input[type="radio"]').click(function(){
if($(this).val() == "walk_in"){
alert('ok');
}
});
I'm attempting to get the Website URL field on this page to display only when the previous question has the radio button "Yes" selected. I've searched and tried a few code examples, but they aren't working. Does anyone have any suggestions for me?
Thanks in advance!
<div class="editfield">
<div class="radio">
<span class="label">Do you have your own website? (required)</span>
<div id="field_8"><label><input type="radio" name="field_8" id="option_9" value="Yes"> Yes</label><label><input type="radio" name="field_8" id="option_10" value="No"> No</label></div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="editfield">
<label for="field_19">Website URL </label>
<input type="text" name="field_19" id="field_19" value="" />
</div>
I noticed that you initally put the javascript I gave you at the top of the page. If you are going to do this then you need to encapsulate the code in a jquery $(document).ready(function(){ });. You only need to use a document ready when your html follows after the javascript.
$(function() {
// place code here
});
However, in this scenario I have created another alternative that will be better, but do not forget that you have to initially set the web url div as hidden. Also, I highly recommend that you set better control ids; it will make your javascript easier to understand.
$('input[name=field_8]').on("click", function(){
var $div_WebUrl = $('#field_19').closest('.editfield');
if($('input[name=field_8]').index(this) == 0)
$div_WebUrl.show();
else
$div_WebUrl.hide();
});
Live DEMO
I have created a little example:
<div class="editfield">
<div class="radio">
<span class="label">Do you have your own website? (required)</span>
<div id="field_8"><label><input type="radio" name="field_8" id="option_9" value="Yes" onclick="document.getElementById('divUrl').style.display='block'"> Yes</label><label><input type="radio" name="field_8" id="option_10" value="No" onclick="document.getElementById('divUrl').style.display='none'"> No</label></div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="editfield" id="divUrl" style="display:none">
<label for="field_19">Website URL </label>
<input type="text" name="field_19" id="field_19" value="" />
</div>
jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/EQkzE/
Note: I have updated the div to include a style, cause I do not know what your css class looks like. Good luck.
Here's a pure JS Solution:
document.getElementById("field_19").parentNode.style.display = "none";
document.getElementById("option_9").onclick = toggleURLInput;
document.getElementById("option_10").onclick = toggleURLInput;
function toggleURLInput(){
document.getElementById("field_19").parentNode.style.display = (document.getElementById("option_9").checked)? "block" : "none";
}
Not a very dynamic solution, but it works.
Something like this will bind the click event to a simple function to look at the radio button and show the other div.
$('#option_9').on('click', function() {
if ($('#option_9').is(':checked')) {
$('#field_19').closest('.editfield').show();
} else {
$('#field_19').closest('.editfield').hide();
}
});
Run sample code