Inserting <object> in current html form - javascript

I have a webpage with an input box and a button. If a user inputs some values (12345) an object need to appear below or instead of that form (the input box and the button).
I am handling a value check through and my whole code looks like this:
<form name="form" action="" method="post">
<input type="text" name="subject" id="subject" placeholder="UNESI KOD">
</form>
<button onclick="proveriKljuc()" style="margin-top:20px">Potvrdi!</button>
<script>
function proveriKljuc() {
if (document.getElementById("subject").value == 12345) {
document.write(
"<center><object id='object1' data='http://termodom.rs/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/akcija1-1.jpg'></object></center>"
);
}
}
</script>
Currently this code is showing a object in a new window (only a object on the page).
Also this is offtopic but if you can help, how can I handle if enter is pressed to activate function proveriKljuc()?

Don't use document.write. If you want to replace the current form:
<div id="wrapper">
<form name="form" action="" method="post">
<input type="text" name="subject" id="subject" placeholder="UNESI KOD">
</form>
</div>
<button onclick="proveriKljuc()" style="margin-top:20px">Potvrdi!</button>
<script>
function proveriKljuc()
{
if(document.getElementById("subject").value == 12345)
{
document.getElementById("wrapper").innerHTML = "<center><object id='object1' data='http://termodom.rs/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/akcija1-1.jpg'></object></center>";
}
}
</script>
If you want your object to appear under the form:
<div id="wrapper">
<form name="form" action="" method="post">
<input type="text" name="subject" id="subject" placeholder="UNESI KOD">
</form>
</div>
<button onclick="proveriKljuc()" style="margin-top:20px">Potvrdi!</button>
<script>
function proveriKljuc()
{
if(document.getElementById("subject").value == 12345)
{
document.getElementById("wrapper").innerHTML += "<center><object id='object1' data='http://termodom.rs/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/akcija1-1.jpg'></object></center>";
}
}
</script>

You can NEVER use document.write after page load. It will wipe the page. Instead have div or a span and fill the innerHTML of it or appendChild of a div created using document.createElement. return false onsubmit to stop submission or make the button type="button" - alternatively show a hidden div How to show hidden div after hitting submit button in form?
I cannot show a working example because stacksnippets do not support submit
window.onload = function() {
document.getElementById("form").onsubmit = function() {
if (this.elements["subject"].value == 12345) {
document.getElementById("objContainer").innerHTML = "<center><object id='object1' data='http://termodom.rs/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/akcija1-1.jpg'></object></center>";
}
return false; // ignore submit
}
}
<form id="form" action="" method="post">
<input type="text" name="subject" id="subject" placeholder="UNESI KOD">
<button type="submit" style="margin-top:20px">Potvrdi!</button>
</form>
<div id="objContainer"></div>

Related

When handling a form submission with addEventListener the action performed is reverted immediately

My webpage has a simple form with an input box and the submit button, and an empty paragraph:
<form action="" class="form" method="post" id="f">
<input type="text" name="text" id="txt" value="">
<input type="submit" name="submitButton" value="go">
</form>
<p id="p1"></p>
I'm trying to write a script that once the submit button is submitted writes the submitted text into the paragraph:
let f = document.getElementById('f')
f.addEventListener('submit', function () {
let text = document.querySelector('#txt').value
document.getElementById('p1').innerHTML = text
})
And it kinda works, meaning that it does shows the text in the paragraph but only for a split second, then it disappears. What am I missing?
You need to preventDefault
let f = document.getElementById('f');
f.addEventListener('submit', function(e) { // access the submit event
e.preventDefault(); // prevent the default behavior of the submit event
let text = document.querySelector('#txt').value
document.getElementById('p1').innerHTML = text
});
when I tried to stop people from copying my image i used a Event listener
all you need to do is change contextmenu to p1 and then change #txt to txt
you need to change input type submit to button. this will not reload page.
function callClick(){
let text = document.querySelector('#txt').value
document.getElementById('p1').innerHTML = text;
}
</script>
<form action="" class="form" method="post">
<input type="text" name="text" id="txt" value="">
<input type="button" id="f" name="submitButton" value="go" onclick="callClick()">
</form>
<p id="p1"></p>

Required Input Field + Onlick Button request

Currently I am trying to make my input field required.
<form name="myForm" method="post">
<input type="text" id="username" name="username" required>
<center><button id="process2" type="submit">Continue</button> </center>
</form>
When I have the above portion it works, however I need it to work whenever I have my button containing a onlick event. <button id="process2" type="submit" onclick="move()">Continue</button> how can I go about doing this?
The issue is currently - The onclick request will fire, and it'll prompt the required option, however the onclick request should not fire unless the required option is populated.
Instead of the onclick , you should listen for the form's submit, and call move() inside it
document.querySelector('form').addEventListener('submit', event => {
event.preventDefault();
console.log('submitted');
move();
});
function move() {
console.log('moving ..');
}
<form name="myForm" method="post">
<input type="text" id="username" name="username" required>
<button id="process2" type="submit">Continue</button>
</form>
Or you can just simply fire the move function but wrap your deserted effect inside if statement that will check if input is empty or not...
function move() {
element = document.getElementById("username").value;
if (element === "") {
console.log("input wasnt populated do something");
}
}
<form name="myForm" method="post">
<input type="text" id="username" name="username" required>
<center><button id="process2" type="submit" onclick="move()">Continue</button> </center>
</form>
Using jquery you can listen the submit event on form like then call move function to redirect to other page or whatever logic you want
$(document).on('submit','form',function(){
event.preventDefault();
// call move function here , move();
});

Two button submit form issue

Hi successfully made a form where there are two submit buttons.
I needed two buttons because I need each button to take the form to a different place, while get/post the information in the first form.
This is how I did it
Javascript:
function submitForm(action) {
var form = document.getElementById('form1');
form.action = action;
form.submit();
}
<form id="form1" method="post" >
<div class="f-row">
<label for="pick">Pick-Up Address</label>
<input type="text" input name="pick" required value="<?php echo isset($_POST['pick']) ? $_POST['pick'] : ''; ?>"/>
</div>
<input type="button" onclick="submitForm('page2.php')" class="btn small color left" value="ADD ANOTHER STOP" />
<input type="button" onclick="submitForm('page3.php')" class="btn medium color right" value="Continue" />
</form>
It works, both buttons submits to the relevant pages.
But now there is one problem I can't seem to fix, previously if the form was not filled, and i clicked submit, it would ask me to fill up the required fields, now it does not anymore.
If required fields are not filled up, it still submits the form.
I need button 1 to not require required fields to be filled up, and button 2 to require it as button 2 submits the form, while button 1 brings it to a new form to fill up with other details before they submit from there.
Anyone know of a way I can sort this?
You can try this: <input type="text" name="pick" id="pick" required/> and in the javascript
function submitForm(action) {
var form = document.getElementById('form1');
form.action = action;
if (document.getElementById('pick').value) {
form.submit();
}}
else{
alert('Please fill the required field!');}
You just need to use jquery to validate the form when the first button is clicked and you can use formaction attribute on the button to specify where the button should go when it's clicked.
$('document').ready(function(){
$('#btn1').on('click',function(){
var pick = $('input[type="text"][name="pick"]').val();
if(pick == ""){
alert("enter pick");
return false;
}else{
$(this).submit();
}
});
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form id="form1" method="post" >
<div class="f-row">
<label for="pick">Pick-Up Address</label>
<input type="text" name="pick" value="your value">
</div>
<button type="submit" formaction="page2.php" class="btn small color left" id="btn1">ADD ANOTHER STOP</button>
<button type="submit" formaction="page3.php" class="btn medium color right">Continue</button>
</form>
You could use jQuery for this.
if ($('#something').length)
This will check if there exist an element with the id 'something', but not if it is empty or which value it has.
To check this you can use:
if($('#something').val().length>0)
or
if($('#something').val() != "")
Do with it what ever is needed.
You could even add this check within your submitForm function just above the current code.
Try this:
<script>
function submitForm(action) {
var a = $("input[name=pick]").val();
if(a) {
var form = document.getElementById('form1');
form.action = action;
form.submit();
} else {
alert('please fill the required field');
return false;
}
}
</script>
Using this way(simple way):--
<form id="myForm" name="myForm" onSubmit="encriptar_rc4();return false;">
<input type="submit" name="submitOne" value="submitOne" class="submitButton" />
<input type="submit" name="submitTwo" value="submitTwo" class="submitButton" />
</form>
<script>
$(function(){
$(".submitButton").click(function(e){
alert($(this).attr("name"));
});
encriptar_rc4();{
alert('hola');
}
});
</script>

Why is "enter" not working for my form?

Here is the code, I can't figure out why enter/return isn't working! Is it because it's inline?
HTML
<div class="wrap"><form name="login" style="margin: 0px">
<label for="fname">CLICK TO ENTER PASSWORD</label>
<input TYPE="text" NAME="pass" size="17" onKeyDown="e.keyCode == 13;" id="fname" class="cool"><br><input type="button" value="LOGIN" class="asbestos-flat-button" onClick="TheLogin(this.form)">
</form>
</div>
JS
<script language="JavaScript" type="text/javascript">
<!--- PASSWORD PROTECTION SCRIPT
function TheLogin() {
var password = 'password';
if (this.document.login.pass.value == password) {
top.location.href="home.html";
}
else {
location.href="index.html";
}
}
// End hiding --->
</script>
I'm learning JS so any help would be so awesome!
UPDATE
Thanks for your help. Still not working when integrated. The page doesn't load the home.html when I hit enter/return. Instead I get no refresh, and the address bar has the url http://example.com/?pass=password.
If I click the button it does load the home.html!
thanks!
Here I wrote a JSFiddle with the working example.
In the HTML code:
Remove onKeyDown="e.keyCode == 13;" from the <input> text element.
Remove onClick="TheLogin(this.form)" from the <input> button element.
Change the type of input button from 'button' to 'submit'. In this way, when you press "enter" in the input text form the form is submitted.
Intercept the "submit" event in the form, adding onSubmit="theLogin(this.form)" on <form> element.
Note: I have renamed the function name from "TheLogin" to "theLogin" because in JavaScript the functions begins with lowercase letters if they are not constructors.
The HTML code:
<div class="wrap">
<form name="login" style="margin: 0px" onSubmit="theLogin(this.form)">
<label for="fname">CLICK TO ENTER PASSWORD</label>
<INPUT TYPE="text" NAME="pass" size="17" id="fname" class="cool">
<br>
<input type="submit" value="LOGIN" class="asbestos-flat-button">
</form>
</div>
And the JavaScript code:
theLogin = function() {
var password = 'password';
if (this.document.login.pass.value === password) {
top.location.href = "home.html";
} else {
location.href = "index.html";
}
}
You have missed the <input type="submit">, without it you can't use the Enter key to submit the form.

Detect post action in a form

I want to do something when a form is submitted.
var ispostaction = false;
$("#myform").submit(function () {
ispostaction = true;
});
When the form is submitted the .submit(function ()) is not called.
Is there anything wrong that I'm doing? I have the form id as myform.
I would appreciate any help.
Here's my xhtml page. I'm using JSF 2
<form id="myform" class="someclass" enctype="application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
action="pagename.jsf" method="post">
// custom input text field
// selectOneMenu
// a few more input text fields
// submit button is below
<input id="javax.faces.ViewState" type="hidden" autocomplete="off" value="...." name="javax.faces.ViewState">
</form>
The jquery documentation:
The submit event is sent to an element when the user is attempting to submit
a form. It can only be attached to <form> elements. Forms can be submitted
either by clicking an explicit <input type="submit">, <input type="image">,
or <button type="submit">, or by pressing Enter when certain form elements
have focus.
Calling the submit function will not trigger the submit event. You can "fix" this by adding a hidden button which you click from jquery instead. Most, if not all, browsers unfortunately display the same behavior.
<html>
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7.0/jquery.min.js"></script>
<body>
<form id="myform" enctype="application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
action="posturl" method="post">
// custom input text field
// selectOneMenu
// a few more input text fields
// submit button is below
<input id="javax.faces.ViewState" type="hidden" autocomplete="off" value="...." name="javax.faces.ViewState">
<input type="text" value="a value" />
<input id="submit" type="submit" value="submit" style="display: none;" />
</form>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$("#myform").bind('submit', function() {
alert('');
});
$("#submit").click();
});
</script>
</body>
</html>

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