I have arrays of radio buttons in my view
<input type="radio" id="s20" name="radio[1]" value="5" { { old('radio.1') ? checked="checked" : '' } } />
...
I need to get their count to pass it to a my PostRequestValidator via <input type="hidden" value="count" name="count" />
I suppose the number of inputs are not known at priori, but there are many ways to do it.
The easiest way is counting them using JavaScript or jQuery to update the value field of the hidden input.
$("input[type=hidden][name=count]").val(
$("input[type=radio]").length
);
Obviously you can select those elements in better ways (using their name or class).
Related
I have code similar to the following:
<input type="checkbox" name="visitProperty" value="1" id="visit-0">
<input type="checkbox" name="visitProperty" value="1" id="visit-1">
<input type="checkbox" name="visitProperty" value="1" id="visit-2">
...
Once the form is submitted I want to get checked checkboxes, so far I've been using
if (isset($_POST['visitProperty']) {..}
But to my understanding it only gets one checkbox? Where as I need to check all of them and see if they were checked, so inside the if statement I can create a loop that gets id's of all submitted checkboxes and then gets the number from id, to update a certain array.
<input type="checkbox" name="visitProperty[]" value="1" id="visit-0">
<input type="checkbox" name="visitProperty[]" value="2" id="visit-1">
<input type="checkbox" name="visitProperty[]" value="3" id="visit-2">
<?php
foreach($_POST['visitProperty'] as $check) {
echo $check . "<br>"; // for example
}
?>
NOTE: $_POST['visitProperty'] will hold checked checkbox values. You will access all the checkboxs as an array as following $_POST['visitProperty'][]
When you put in the name, you are declaring a variable. You need to declare it as an array, or each checkbox will bump out the last one. Add some empty square brackets to the name.
You would need or defined ID or a unique value, otherwise you will not be able to identify them on the server-side (the ID does not get sent in $_POST).
So in case of a unique, identifyable ID, you could do something like:
<input type="checkbox" name="visitProperty[<?php // echo some unique id from a database for example ?>]" value="1" id="visit-0">
The reason you would need the ID to be identifyable, is that unchecked checkboxes do not get sent to the server, so you might end up with an array of 2 if visitProperty is an array, but you would not know which 2.
Given this code:
<input type="checkbox" id="Coke" name="Price" value="70" />
<input type="checkbox" id="Fanta" name="Price" value="70" />
<input type="checkbox" id="Sprite" name="Price" value="70" />
I would like to know how, if my user selects Fanta checkbox, I want my php variable $type="Fanta" but I need form checkbox VALUES to stay NUMERIC for total price calculation.
It's not clear what exactly you're asking, but I believe you basically want 2 fields, one that defines the price and one that defines the selected type.
In that case, your best bet would be to store the prices server-side (That way people can't modify them too, which is good!). If you do this, your checkboxes will look like this:
<input type="checkbox" id="Coke" name="type[]" value="Coke" />
<input type="checkbox" id="Fanta" name="type[]" value="Fanta" />
<input type="checkbox" id="Sprite" name="type[]" value="Sprite" />
Your backend code would look like this:
$prices = array(
'Coke' => 70,
'Fanta' => 70,
'Sprite' => 70
);
$types = $_POST['type'];
$total = 0;
foreach($types as $key => $type) {
if (!isset($prices[$type]))
continue;
$total += $prices[$type];
}
// Use $total as your total price for whatever calculation
echo $total;
As per your comment, if you still want these prices client side for calculations, you can use json_encode to output it into a script tag and use the prices directly. It's basically going to turn the server-side prices array into a client-side array of prices.
<script type="text/javascript">
var prices = <?= json_encode($prices) ?>;
// Now you can use prices['Coke'] etc, based off the value of the selected checkbox.
</script>
I would like to know how, if my user selects Fanta checkbox,
Then name you field fanta:
<input type="checkbox" id="Fanta" name="fanta" value="70" />
Once you have done that you can get the values using either the $_POST or the $_GET superglobal (depending on your form method):
if (isset($_POST['fanta'])) {
echo $_POST['fanta'];
}
However you should never ever ever rely on the prices coming from the clientside!
but I need form checkbox VALUES to stay NUMERIC for total price calculation.
That is not going to happen because in HTTP values are being send as strings. Luckily PHP does automatic type juggling for you so you will still be able to do calculations with the string values.
http://codepad.viper-7.com/GOhHdz
In some situations you want to make it a integer value explicitly. In that case you can use type casting:
var_dump((int) '18');
http://codepad.viper-7.com/kJlGoS
When you post a form, anyway you will get 70 as value.
echo $_POST['Price'];
gives 70
<input type="checkbox" value="Coke" name="Price" rel=70 />
<input type="checkbox" value="Fanta" name="Price" rel="70" />
<input type="checkbox" value="Sprite" name="Price" rel="70" />
use javascript to get rel attribute value for selected checkbox for total price
I am using position absolute's validation engine for my form. I would like to check whether at least one checkbox from group is selected. In examples it is done by setting the same name attribute for group of checkboxes.
I cannot name checkboxes with the same name, because I am saving their state in database with following code:
$values = array(
'checkbox1' => null,
'checkbox2' => null
);
foreach (array_intersect_key($_POST, $values) as $key => $value) {
$values[$key] = mysql_real_escape_string($value);
}
$query_add_candidate=sprintf("INSERT INTO dbase (checkbox1, checkbox2) VALUES ('$values[checkbox1]', '$dates[checkbox2]')"
Now checkbox1 and checkbox2 are validated individually, beacuse they have different names. How can I check if selected is at least one of them?
Here is my HTML code:
<input class="validate[minCheckbox[1]] checkbox" type="checkbox" name="checkbox1" id="maxcheck1" value="1"/> Text1
<input class="validate[minCheckbox[1]] checkbox" type="checkbox" name="checkbox2" id="maxcheck2" value="2"/> Text2
on php ,
if(!$_POST['checkbox1'] && !$_POST['checkbox2']){
echo 'Error check at least one';
}
but what you really want is an array,
HTML,
<input type="checkbox" value="ch1" name="check[]" />
<input type="checkbox" value="ch2" name="check[]" />
php
<?php
if(empty($_POST['check'])){
echo 'Error: hey, check at least one will you!?';
}
?>
so this way you don't have to check all of them one by one, especially if you have loads of them on the same page.
NOTICE: You should also know, if checkbox is not ticked it will also not be set on the php $_POST superglobal, otherwise if it is ticked, it will show whatever the value="..." holds,
if its posted then its checked,
so if you have it in $_POST["checkbox_name"] then its checked, otherwise it wont be posted.
You can either add loads of code to reimplement control arrays in a poor way, or you can alter the code that builds your query so it can accept control arrays.
I would prefer the latter.
I'm trying to make a simple survey in php
I have a set of radio buttons on a page called sja.php that sends its to sjamail.php page
the problem is that when I go to get
$answer = $_POST['ans'];
I can't seen to do anything like
echo "$answer";
but if I were to throw some logic at it
like
if ($answer == "ans1") {
echo 'Correct';
}
else {
echo 'Incorrect';
}
It will display correct or incorrect (edit: The if/else works correctly and will display the correct answer )
so why is it I can't access the value of the radio button "ans" as a string?
http://www.markonsolutions.com/sja.php
print_r($_POST); will return Array ( [ans] => )
Perhaps the value is something other than text.
Try
var_dump($answer);
or
print_r($answer, TRUE);
Your page works correctly if you select any of the first 4 radio buttons (ans1/2/3/4). But the rest of the radio buttons next to all those images have blank values, which would explain why your posted value is empty if you selected any of those to test with.
You need to make sure that the field in HTML has...
<input type="radio" name="ans" value="ans1" />
<input type="radio" name="ans" value="ans2" />
Also make sure your form method is POST
I had a similar problem with the following:
<input name="03 - Gender" type="radio" value="Masculino"/>Male<br/>
<input name="03 - Gender" type="radio" value="Femenino" required="required"/>Female <br/>
<input type="hidden" name="03 - Gender" value=""/>
but when I removed the third input line (the hidden one) the problem desapeared.
Try this:
$answer = (string)$_POST["ans"];
echo $answer;
You must convert $_POST["ans"] to string.
I have an HTML form - with PHP, I am sending the data of the form into a MySQL database. Some of the answers to the questions on the form have checkboxes. Obviously, the user does not have to tick all checkboxes for one question. I also want to make the other questions (including radio groups) optional.
However, if I submit the form with empty boxes, radio-groups etc, I received a long list of 'Undefined index' error messages for each of them.
How can I get around this? Thanks.
I've used this technique from time to time:
<input type="hidden" name="the_checkbox" value="0" />
<input type="checkbox" name="the_checkbox" value="1" />
note: This gets interpreted differently in different server-side languages, so test and adjust if necessary. Thanks to SimonSimCity for the tip.
Unchecked radio or checkbox elements are not submitted as they are not considered as successful. So you have to check if they are sent using the isset or empty function.
if (isset($_POST['checkbox'])) {
// checkbox has been checked
}
An unchecked checkbox doesn't get sent in the POST data.
You should just check if it's empty:
if (empty($_POST['myCheckbox']))
....
else
....
In PHP empty() and isset() don't generate notices.
Here is a simple workaround using javascript:
before the form containing checkboxes is submitted, set the "off" ones to 0 and check them to make sure they submit. this works for checkbox arrays for example.
///// example //////
given a form with id="formId"
<form id="formId" onSubmit="return formSubmit('formId');" method="POST" action="yourAction.php">
<!-- your checkboxes here . for example: -->
<input type="checkbox" name="cb[]" value="1" >R
<input type="checkbox" name="cb[]" value="1" >G
<input type="checkbox" name="cb[]" value="1" >B
</form>
<?php
if($_POST['cb'][$i] == 0) {
// empty
} elseif ($_POST['cb'][$i] == 1) {
// checked
} else {
// ????
}
?>
<script>
function formSubmit(formId){
var theForm = document.getElementById(formId); // get the form
var cb = theForm.getElementsByTagName('input'); // get the inputs
for(var i=0;i<cb.length;i++){
if(cb[i].type=='checkbox' && !cb[i].checked) // if this is an unchecked checkbox
{
cb[i].value = 0; // set the value to "off"
cb[i].checked = true; // make sure it submits
}
}
return true;
}
</script>
To add to fmsf's code, when adding checkboxes I make them an array by having [] in the name
<FORM METHOD=POST ACTION="statistics.jsp?q=1&g=1">
<input type="radio" name="gerais_radio" value="primeiras">Primeiras Consultas por medico<br/>
<input type="radio" name="gerais_radio" value="salas">Consultas por Sala <br/>
<input type="radio" name="gerais_radio" value="assistencia">Pacientes por assistencia<br/>
<input type="checkbox" name="option[]" value="Option1">Option1<br/>
<input type="checkbox" name="option[]" value="Option2">Option2<br/>
<input type="checkbox" name="option[]" value="Option3">Option3<br/>
<input type="submit" value="Ver">
Use this
$myvalue = (isset($_POST['checkbox']) ? $_POST['checkbox'] : 0;
Or substituting whatever your no value is for the 0
We are trouble on detecting which one checked or not.
If you are populating form in a for loop, please use value property as a data holder:
<?php for($i=1;$i<6;$i++):?>
<input type="checkbox" name="active[]" value="<?php echo $i ?>"
<?endfor;?>
If submit form you'll get order numbers of checkboxes that checked (in this case I checked 3rd and 4th checkboxes):
array(1) {
["active"]=>
array(2) {
[0]=>
string(1) "3"
[1]=>
string(1) "4"
}
}
When you are processing form data in loop, let's say in post.php, use following code to detect if related row is selected:
if(in_array($_POST['active'] ,$i))
$answer_result = true;
else
$answer_result = false;
Final code for testing:
<?php if (isset($_POST) && !empty($_POST)):
echo '<pre>';
var_dump($_POST);
echo '</pre>';
endif;
?>
<form action="test.php" method="post">
<?php for($i=1;$i<6;$i++):?>
<input type="checkbox" name="active[]" value="<?php echo $i; ?>" />
<?php endfor;?>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
Although many answers were submitted, I had to improvise for my own solution because I used the customized check-boxes. In other words, none of the answers worked for me.
What I wanted to get is an array of check-boxes, with on and off values. The trick was to submit for each check-box on/off value a separator. Lets say that the separator is ";" so the string you get is
;, on, ;, ;, ;
Then, once you get your post, simply split the data into array using the "," as a character for splitting, and then if the array element contains "on", the check-box is on, otherwise, it is off.
For each check-box, change the ID, everything else is the same... and syntax that repeats is:
<div>
<input type="hidden" name="onoffswitch" class="onoffswitch-checkbox" value=";" />
...some other custom code here...
<input type="checkbox" name="onoffswitch" class="onoffswitch-checkbox" id="myonoffswitch1" checked>
</div>
EDIT: instead of the ";", you can use some KEY string value, and that way you will know that you did not mess up the order, once the POST is obtained on the server-side... that way you can easily create a Map, Hash, or whatever. PS: keep them both within the same div tag.