I need to show message "Please wait Processing" on click of Submit button using a hidden DOM element which contains the message and make it visible, but the message is not showing.
My html for the form and my validate function are given below.
<form name="siteSearchForm" method=post action="<%=request.getContextPath()%>/servlet/visibilityController" onsubmit="javascript:return validate();on_load()">
<td align="center" width="10%"><input type=submit name="siteSearchSubmit" value="SUBMIT" > <input type="RESET" name="clearTN" value="RESET"></td>
</form>
I tried the below code by calling on_load on form tag during onsubmit but it is not showing message
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
function on_load(){
var y = document.getElementById("txtHiddenUname");
y.type= "text";
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<input type="hidden" id="txtHiddenUname" value="invalid input" />
</body>
Becuase the return statement will exit the function call and nothing after it will run. You would need to add it BEFORE the return.
onsubmit="on_load(); return validate();"
or you can do
onsubmit="return validate() && on_load();"
but your on_load function needs to return true.
function on_load(){ return true; }
Also why are you using an input to display a message? Seems like you should be using a paragraph with display none/block. javascript: is not needed in event handlers, and on_load seems like it should be called on window load, not a form submission.
Also add the following line :
y.style.display = "block";
Related
Apologies if this question isn't layed out correctly (my first time using stack overflow).
I'm trying to validate if my inputs on a form are filled in when a user presses submit, it alerts the user when the inputs are empty but also when they are not, I'm not sure whats going wrong. Here is my Javascript:
<script>
function validation() {
var x = document.forms["bookingForm"]["id"].value;
if (x == "") {
alert("Ensure all fileds are filled");
return false;
} else {
sendSMS();
alert("Success");
return true;
}
}
</script>
Here is a link to an expanded part of the code for reference:https://pastebin.com/Dj5fA3gB
The general syntax for accessing a form element and element's value are:
document.forms[number].elements[number]
document.forms[number].elements[number].value
If you are using submitButton as in and you are calling validation on onSubmit of the form then you need to call event.preventDefault();
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>
<form onsubmit="validation()" name="bookingForm">
First Name: <input type="text" name="id" value="Donald"><br>
Last Name: <input type="text" name="lname" value="Duck">
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />
</form>
<script>
function validation() {
event.preventDefault();
var x = document.forms["bookingForm"]["id"].value;
if (x == "") {
alert("Ensure all fileds are filled");
return false;
} else {
sendSMS();
alert("Success");
return true;
}
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
As suggested in my comment the most clean solution is to use the html attribute required by adding it to your inputs.
Looks something like this.
<form>
<input type="text" name="example" required>
<input type="submit" name="send">
</form>
The biggest advantage is that it works without any additional JS which is in my opinion always the prefered solution.
You didn't include return keyword in the form tag and adding unnecessary keyword "name" in the form tag.
<form onsubmit="return validation()" method="POST"
action="">
remove the "name" attribute from form tag and add action attribute.
Within the parenthesis in the action attribute, mention what happen if your validation success
Ex:(this code help you understand "action" attribute)
<form onsubmit="return productsvalidationform();" method="POST"
action="AddProductServlet">
when the form was successfully validated, I directed to AddProductServlet.(AddProductServlet is JSP servlet).
so that mention where do you need to redirect.
I want to display a confirmation dialog box like "Do you want to continue?" If "yes", I want to popup a message displaying form output, if "No" I want to stay on the same page.
In the code shown below I am navigating to facto.html for displying the output, but I want to show a popup with its contents instead. How can I do that?
My index.html:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Lift From Scratch</title>
<script type="text/javascript">
<!--
function getConfirmation(){
var retVal = confirm("Do you want to continue ?");
if( retVal == true ){
<!--document.write("continue")-->
<!--window.location.href = '/facto.html';-->
return true;
}
else{
alert("Don't continue")
<!--window.location.href = 'index.html';-->
return false;
}
}
//-->
</script>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Finding Factorial</h1>
<div id="main" class="lift:surround?with=default&at=content">
<form method="post">
<table>
<tr><td> Enter a Number:</td> <td><input name="num" type="number"></td></tr>
<tr><td><input type="submit" value="Submit" onclick="getConfirmation();" formaction="facto"></td>
<td><input type="reset" value="Reset"></td>
</tr>
</table>
</form>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
facto.html:
<div data-lift="factorial">
<p>Factorial is: <span name="paramname"></span></p>
</div>
Try something like this:
function validateMyForm()
{
if( confirm('Are you sure?') )
return true; // will submit the form
else
return false; // do not submit the form
}
<form name="myForm" onsubmit="return validateMyForm();">
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />
</form>
You're going to probably want to fall back to JavaScript for this one, to be honest. You can make the form an AJAX form using Lift's SHtml.makeFormsAjax helper, then you can bind your submit button using SHtml.ajaxSubmit. The callback you pass to ajaxSubmit should return a JsCmd. That JsCmd can trigger the display of the popup. You can even render the popup's contents by using SHtml.idMemoize.
If you describe this question in a little more detail on the Lift group, you will probably find folks willing to help you with some of the more specific aspects of it.
I am trying to get a function to print out whatever the user inputs into the text-box. I am using onClick as an attribute on my submit button. I know I set it up properly because it flickers the answer, but only for a split second. How can I get the input to stay on the page? Here's the code: HTML: Type what you want to post to the website!
HTML:
<div id="main_div">
<section id="leftbox">
<form name="mybox">
Type what you want to post to the website!:
<br />
<input type="textbox" size="15" maxlength="15" name="text" id="text">
<br />
<input type="submit" value="Submit!" onClick="doFirst()">
</form>
</section>
</div>
<div id="insert"></div>
Javascript:
function doFirst(){
text = document.getElementById('text');
insert = document.getElementById('insert');
if(text.value == "")
{
insert.innerHTML = "Please input something!";
return false;
}
else
{
insert.innerHTML = text.value;
}
}
try this:
Using type=button
<input type="button" value="Submit!" onClick="doFirst()">
OR using type=submit
<form name="mybox" onsubmit="doFirst(); return false;">
<input type="submit" value="Submit!">
</form>
Explain:
The action for onclick in submit button DO executed. You keep see the page does not have any changes, because of there are a FORM. And the key point: the form handle the submit action after the JS function doFirst() immediately. Adding the onsubmit in the form with return false to stop default action, means:
<form name="mybox" onsubmit="return false;">
<input type="button" value="Submit!" onClick="doFirst()">
</form>
To simplify the changes, use button instead of submit type, or using onsubmit instead of onclick in form trigger.
onClick="doFirst()"
gets converted into an anonymous function:
function(){ doFirst() }
and whatever that function returns determines if the submit should be completed or aborted, so you should use:
onClick="return doFirst();"
In other words, it's not enough that doFirst return something, whatever doFirst returns should be returned again inside the onClick.
I have some javascipt code here that validates a user form. When the user inputs the correct answer it tells them and gives them the link to the next question. At least, that's what it is supposed to do. When i click the form it reloads the page but it should not because i added return false.
the div tra holds 35
and the div usermsg is the user inputted value.
<script>
$("#submit").click(function(){
var clientmsg6 = $("#usermsg").val();
var rightanswer = $("#tra").val();
if (clientmsg6<>rightanswer)
{
$("#confirm").html("<h2>Sorry, wrong answer.</h2>");
}
else
{
$("#confirm").html("<a href='#' onclick='play();' style='font-size:20px;' id='new1'>Click here for Question 2</a>");
}
return false;
});
</script>
Any ideas why this is not working?
It should be
if (clientmsg6 != rightanswer)
not
if (clientmsg6<>rightanswer)
To prevent a form submission, you need to return false on the form itself instead of on the submit button. Your code should become:
HTML
<form action="page.php" method="post">
<input id="usermsg" type="text" name="answer" />
<input id="submit" type="submit" value="Submit" />
</form>
JS (please note the line where you have clientmsg6, you have a syntax error)
$("#myform").on('submit', function(){
var clientmsg6 = $("#usermsg").val();
var rightanswer = $("#tra").val();
if (clientmsg6 != rightanswer) { //This line was also wrong, should be != instead of <>
$("#confirm").html("<h2>Sorry, wrong answer.</h2>");
}
else {
$("#confirm").html("<a href='#' onclick='play();' style='font-size:20px;' id='new1'>Click here for Question 2</a>");
}
return false;
});
Alternatively, you can keep your existing code by changing your submit button to be just a plain old button, but you will lose the extra functionality of the user being able to hit the enter key and performing the same action.
<form action="page.php" method="post">
<input id="usermsg" type="text" name="answer" />
<input id="submit" type="button" value="Submit" />
</form>
Instead of using .html(), try using .text()
if #submit is a link tag otherwise use the form ID and the submit event
$("#submit").click(function(e){
e.preventDefault()
...
...
...
});
You need to attach handlers once the document has finished loading.
Wrap your script in the following
<script>
$(function() {
// script
});
</script>
I have an HTML form that I submit after changing the action with some javascript. Two different buttons can do the submit.
The interesting thing is that I was trying to debug it and inserted an alert after changing the action and before submitting the form. The form is submitted without the alert ever being displayed. To make sure it's actually performing the javascript, I added an alert before changing the action. That alert displays; the alert after changing the action does not.
<form name='FormSelect' method='post' action='Undefined'>
...
<button onclick="SubmitForm('class')">Submit</button>
...
<button onclick="SubmitForm('student')">Submit</button>
...
</form>
<script type="text/javascript">
function SubmitForm(target){
alert("Action 1: " + document.FormSelect.action);
if (target=="class") {
document.FormSelect.action = "ClassAction.php";
} else {
document.FormSelect.action = "StudentAction.php";
}
alert("Action 2: " + document.FormSelect.action);
// document.FormSelect.submit();
}
</script>
Is that the expected sequence of events?
Any button placed inside form element will cause submit action. To prevent this you can add type="button" to button elements, or make you submit callback return false;
<button type="button" onclick="SubmitForm('class')">Submit</button
see http://jsfiddle.net/yD2Uu/
As the others have already pointed out the form will be submitted anyway if you don't cancle the event. I want to suggest a JavaScript free solution to your problem.
<button formaction="ClassAction.php">Submit</button>
<button formaction="StudentAction.php">Submit</button>
It's not supported in IE < 10 though. But you can still use your function as a fallback then, just a bit more elegant ;)
function SubmitForm(button){
button.form.action = button.formaction;
}
A better solution is to give the buttons a name each and submit to Action.php and let the server get the value of the named button
$student = filter_var($_POST["student"], FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING); // php5 cleaning
when you have
<form method="post" action="Actions.php">
<input type="submit" name="student" value="John Doe" />
<input type="submit" name="student" value="Jane Doe" />
<input type="submit" name="student" value="Whatever Doe" />
</form>
Otherwise if you must
Try this
<form method='post' action='Undefined'>
...
<input type="button" value="Class" onclick="SubmitForm(this)" />
...
<input type="button" value="Student" onclick="SubmitForm(this)"/>
...
</form>
<script type="text/javascript">
var actions = {
"class":"ClassAction.php",
"student":"StudentAction.php"
}
function SubmitForm(button){
button.form.action = actions[button.value];
button.form.submit();
}
</script>
Thanks to Yauhen Vasileusky's example, I started removing code between my 1st & 2nd alerts and found that the problem seems to be the following IF statement:
if (document.FormSelect.FormName.value.substr(0,19)=="ObservationRequest_" || document.FormSelect.FormName.value=="StudentReg2013rx" || document.FormSelect.FormName.value=="Toddler Update Form v3rx")
{
document.FormSelect.action = "GenerateXDP.php";
}
When I remove it, both alerts are displayed. So the answer to my question is that changing the action does not submit the form; it was some other error in my code that made it appear as if that was the case.