I'm currently doing the following to compensate for boolean's not mapping well to radio buttons. I am stuck binding 1 and 0 to the value (instead of true and false) because of how the fields are read out of the observables. The value of Pref1/Pref2 come as true/false boolean values from the server. The key here is I want to not only data-bind the checked value of the radio button to match the true/false in the object, but I also want the boolean value of true/false to be written back into the GraduationClass object. My compensation code is not only ugly, but not scalable.
<input type="radio" value="1" name="radioGroup" data-bind="checked: Pref1" />Yes
<input type="radio" value="0" name="radioGroup" data-bind="checked: Pref2" />No
Save
function SiteSettingsViewModel() {
var self = this;
this.saveGraduationClass = function(graduationClass) {
// hack until i get a custom radio button binding
if (graduationClass.Pref1() == 1) {
graduationClass.Pref1(true);
} else {
graduationClass.Pref1(false);
}
if (graduationClass.Pref2() == 1) {
graduationClass.Pref2(true);
} else {
graduationClass.Pref2(false);
}
// ...ajax call to save graduationClass to the server
}
function GraduationClass(data) {
var self = this;
ko.mapping.fromJS(data, {}, this);
}
Here is example from knockoutJs website, that demonstrate how to use radio buttons with
"checked" attribute:
<p>Send me spam: <input type="checkbox" data-bind="checked: wantsSpam" /></p>
<div data-bind="visible: wantsSpam">
Preferred flavor of spam:
<div><input type="radio" name="flavorGroup" value="cherry" data-bind="checked: spamFlavor" /> Cherry</div>
<div><input type="radio" name="flavorGroup" value="almond" data-bind="checked: spamFlavor" /> Almond</div>
<div><input type="radio" name="flavorGroup" value="msg" data-bind="checked: spamFlavor" /> Monosodium Glutamate</div>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
var viewModel = {
wantsSpam: ko.observable(true),
spamFlavor: ko.observable("almond") // Initially selects only the Almond radio button
};
// ... then later ...
viewModel.spamFlavor("msg"); // Now only Monosodium Glutamate is checked
</script>
But I dont understand why you use two objects - "Pref1" and "Pref2" fro one radiobutton group "radioGroup"? In this case you just could use one object as in an example used "spamFlavor".
So, please, describe more ditaily what you want to bind: one radiobuttons group by one selected value, or something else.
Also you could use computed observables to calculate different values, please see example.
Related
I have a list of multiple checkboxes in the form. The user can check all the checkboxes but at least one is required. Without selecting at least one, checkbox they should not be able to submit the form. how to make it in contact form 7?
I have added the script which is not working.
Here is my script
$(document).ready(function () {
$('#checkBtn').click(function() {
checked = $("input[type=checkbox]:checked").length;
if(!checked) {
alert("You must check at least one checkbox.");
return false;
}
});
});
In this only write star(*) after checkbox element in the plugin form
[checkbox* checkbox "test 1" "test 2"]
[submit "Send"]
It is perfectly work.
On this set your code
$('#fm_submit').submit(function(e){
e.preventDefault();
var ck_box = $('input[type="checkbox"]:checked').length;
// return in firefox or chrome console
// the number of checkbox checked
console.log(ck_box);
if(ck_box < 1){
alert('Select any one box');
}
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form name = "frmTest[]" id="fm_submit">
<input type="checkbox" value="true" checked="true" >
<input type="checkbox" value="true" checked="true" >
<input type="checkbox" >
<input type="checkbox" >
<input type="submit" id="fm_submit" name="fm_submit" value="Submit">
</form>
<div class="container"></div>
Paste the code from above on the bottom of the form instead of the Additional Settings
$('#fm_submit').submit(function(e){
e.preventDefault();
var ck_box = $('input[type="checkbox"]:checked').length;
// return in firefox or chrome console the number of checkbox checked enter code here
console.log(ck_box);
if(ck_box < 1){ alert('Select any one box'); }
});
I am new to angular js. and I have a situation.
I want to bind data to an input element from another input element based on a condition (checking a checkbox). I am trying to achieve this using the
ng-if angular directive. But it's not working,
So when I type something into input1 and check the checkbox, I want the value of input1 to be reflected in input2.
<input ng-model="value.one" type="text" />
<input ng-model="checked" ng-change="isChecked(value.one)" type="checkbox" />
<input ng-model="value.selected" />
in your controller:
$scope.isChecked(val) {
if($scope.checked) {
$scope.value.selected = val;
} else {
$scope.value.selected = null;
}
}
I want to create a small count button but don't know how to make it in JavaScript...
Here's the code :
HTML
<div id="input_div">
<input type="text" size="25" value="0" id="count">
<input type="button" value="-" id="moins">
<input type="button" value="+" id="plus">
</div>
It must increase AND decrease the number in the input[type=text] when click on the -/+ button.
Can someone help me ?
You'd need two things.
Variables - which are the way to store information in JavaScript
Event handlers, which are the way to react to events in JavaScript
First, let's create a script tag, and put a JavaScript count variable in it, we'll put it in the bottom of our body tag:
<script>
var count = 0;
</script>
Now, we want to create a handler, that is something that executes whenever the plus and minus signs are clicked
<script>
var count = 0;
function plus(){
count++;
}
function minus(){
count--;
}
</script>
We've created two functions to call when the buttons are clicked, but we do not update the value in the HTML, or call them yet, let's update the value in the HTML.
We'll do so by document.getElementByID for the element to update and then change its value. Our script tag should look something liks this:
<script>
var count = 0;
var countEl = document.getElementById("count");
function plus(){
count++;
countEl.value = count;
}
function minus(){
count--;
countEl.value = count;
}
</script>
One last thing, we need to tell the elements in the DOM to execute those handlers.
<div id="input_div">
<input type="text" size="25" value="0" id="count">
<input type="button" value="-" id="moins" onclick="minus()">
<input type="button" value="+" id="plus" onclick="plus()">
</div>
We've added them as event handlers to the DOM reacting to a click on the buttons, completing the task.
Now, here are some things we can improve:
We can use addEventListener to avoid polluting our DOM, and create unobtrusive JavaScript.
We can use a more advanced tool like KnockoutJS to handle binding the value we have to the DOM element instead of updating it ourselves.
We can read Eloquent JavaScript and learn more about how the language works!
Good luck, happy JavaScripting, and happy learning :)
DEMO FIDDLE FOR JAVASCRIPT
code html -
<div id="input_div">
<input type="text" size="25" value="0" id="count" />
<input type="button" value="-" id="minus" onClick = "doMinus();" />
<input type="button" value="+" id="plus" onClick = "doPlus();" />
</div>
code javaScript -
function doMinus(){
document.getElementById("count").value = --document.getElementById("count").value;
}
function doPlus(){
document.getElementById("count").value = ++document.getElementById("count").value;
}
jQuery Version
DEMO FIDDLE FOR JQUERY
code html -
<div id="input_div">
<input type="text" size="25" value="0" id="count" />
<input type="button" value="-" id="minus" />
<input type="button" value="+" id="plus" />
</div>
code jQuery -
$('#minus').click(function(){
$("#count").val(parseInt($("#count").val())-1);
});
$('#plus').click(function(){
$("#count").val(parseInt($("#count").val())+1);
});
U can write some script as shown
<script>
function increase(){
var a = 1;
var textBox = document.getElementById("count");
textBox.value = a;
a++;
}
</script>
<body>
<button type="button" onclick="increase()">+</button>
<input type="text" id="text">
</body>
similarly u can do it for - decrease button
in this case, I use input type range that display a slider :
<input type="range" id="myInputRange" value="15" min="0" max="50" step="1" onchange="document.getElementById('output').textContent=value" ><span id="output">15</span>
(instead of input type number that is not supported by IE)
This seems pretty simple.
(function() {
var count = 0;
var minusButton = document.getElementById("moins");
var plusButton = document.getElementById("plus");
var countBox = document.getElementById("count");
minusButton.onclick = function(e) {
countBox.value = --count;
};
plusButton.onclick = function(e) {
countBox.value = ++count;
};
})();
I'm using handlebars in a backbone.js rails app, and I have a Boolean field I'm populating with a checkbox.
When I load the edit page, the form is populated with the contents from the server JSON something like
{id:3,user:'test',checkbox:1}
now in my handlebar form, I want to show that the checkbox is 1.
< input type="checkbox" name="checkbox" value="1" {{#if checkbox}} {{bindAttr checkbox checked="isSelected"}}{{/if}} >
but this isn't returning the checked checkbox. I'd really like to just be able to say if checkbox==1, but I don't see how I can do that with handlebars.
Anysuggestions??
What you would usually do, is using a Boolean in the 'model'.
{
isChecked: true
}
and then
<input type="checkbox" {{bindAttr checked="isChecked"}}>
If the Boolean is true, it will render the checked property, and if the Boolean is false, it would omit the property. So if isChecked is true, then Handlebars would output
<input type="checkbox" checked>
and if isChecked were false, we would get
<input type="checkbox">
Which is what we want!
I also wrote a helper to do this. It doesn't use backbone.js, so may be an alternative for some:
Handlebars.registerHelper('checked', function(currentValue) {
return currentValue == '1' ? ' checked="checked"' : '';
});
Usage example:
<input type="checkbox" name="cbxExample" id="cbxExample" {{checked cbxExample}}/>
Would tick a checkbox if the supplied JSON was:
{"cbxExample" : "1"}
Resulting in:
<input type="checkbox" name="cbxExample" id="cbxExample" checked="checked" />
[my first post - hope that's helpful!]
I am starter with Play Framework. I got a problem when i passed parameters.
I want to pass a collection from view to controller. And i do not know how to do this. I always get "null" when i get a collection from view.
My code below:
Code in controller:
public static void create(List<Book> books) throws Exception {
for(Book book : books){
System.out.println(book.get(0).author) // i got null :(
}
}
Code in HTML
Book 1:
<input type="text" name="books.author" />
<input type="text" name="books.title" />
Book 2:
<input type="text" name="books.author" />
<input type="text" name="books.title" />
When i submit, i want to add 2 records into database include Book1 and Book2. Please support me
Thanks
You can make this work by simplying add the array indicator to your HTML code
Book 1:
<input type="text" name="books[0].author" />
<input type="text" name="books[0].title" />
Book 2:
<input type="text" name="books[1].author" />
<input type="text" name="books[1].title" />
I have tested this solution, and it works fine.
Also note that your println will not compile, as you are calling get(0) on the Book object, and not the List object. If you just println book.author, it outputs the author as required.
In case anyone needs an example of the Javascript for dyanmically adding and removing books (JQUERY needed):
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
var bookCount=0;
$('#btnAddBook').click(function() {
bookCount++;
//newElem = go up a to the parent div then grab the previous container
var newElem = $(this).parent().prev().clone().attr('id', 'book[' + bookCount + ']');
//for each input inside the div, change the index to the latest bookCount
$(newElem).find("input").each(function(){
var name = $(this).attr('name');
var leftBracket = name.indexOf("[");
var rightBracket = name.indexOf("]");
var beforeBracketString = name.substring(0,leftBracket+1);//+1 to include the bracket
var afterBracketString = name.substring(rightBracket);
$(this).attr('name', beforeBracketString + bookCount + afterBracketString);
});
//insert it at the end of the books
$(this).parent().prev().after(newElem);
$(newElem).find("input").each(function(){
$(this).attr('id', $(this).attr('id') + bookCount);
});
//enable the remove button
$('#btnRemovebook').removeAttr('disabled');
//If we are at 16 divs, disable the add button
if (bookCount == 15)
$(this).attr('disabled','disabled');
});
$('#btnRemoveBook').click(function() {
bookCount--;
//remove the last book div
$(this).parent().prev().remove();
//in case add was disabled, enable it
$('#btnAddbook').removeAttr('disabled');
//never let them remove the last book div
if (bookCount == 0)
$(this).attr('disabled','disabled');
});
});
</script>
<!-- HTML Snippet -->
<div id="book[0]">
<label> Book: </label>
<input type="text" name="books[0].author" value="Author" />
<input type="text" name="books[0].title" value="Title" />
</div>
<div>
<input type="button" id="btnAddbook" value="Add another book" />
<input type="button" id="btnRemovebook" value="Remove last book" disabled="disabled" />
</div>
<!-- REST of the HTML -->