I'm using the JQuery Autocomplete in one of my forms.
The basic form selects products from my database. This works great, but I'd like to further develop so that only products shipped from a certain zipcode are returned. I've got the backend script figured out. I just need to work out the best way to pass the zipcode to this script.
This is how my form looks.
<form>
<select id="zipcode">
<option value="2000">2000</option>
<option value="3000">3000</option>
<option value="4000">4000</option>
</select>
<input type="text" id="product"/>
<input type="submit"/>
</form>
And here is the JQuery code:
$("#product").autocomplete
({
source:"product_auto_complete.php?postcode=" + $('#zipcode').val() +"&",
minLength: 2,
select: function(event, ui){
//action
}
});
This code works to an extent. But only returns the first zipcode value regardless of which value is actually selected. I guess what's happening is that the source URL is primed on page load rather than when the select menu is changed. Is there a way around this? Or is there a better way overall to achieve the result I'm after?
You need to use a different approach for the source call, like this:
$("#product").autocomplete({
source: function(request, response) {
$.getJSON("product_auto_complete.php", { postcode: $('#zipcode').val() },
response);
},
minLength: 2,
select: function(event, ui){
//action
}
});
This format lets you pass whatever the value is when it's run, as opposed to when it's bound.
This is not to complicated men:
$(document).ready(function() {
src = 'http://domain.com/index.php';
// Load the cities straight from the server, passing the country as an extra param
$("#city_id").autocomplete({
source: function(request, response) {
$.ajax({
url: src,
dataType: "json",
data: {
term : request.term,
country_id : $("#country_id").val()
},
success: function(data) {
response(data);
}
});
},
min_length: 3,
delay: 300
});
});
jQuery("#whatJob").autocomplete(ajaxURL,{
width: 260,
matchContains: true,
selectFirst: false,
minChars: 2,
extraParams: { //to pass extra parameter in ajax file.
"auto_dealer": "yes",
},
});
I believe you are correct in thinking your call to $("#product").autocomplete is firing on page load. Perhaps you can assign an onchange() handler to the select menu:
$("#zipcode").change(resetAutocomplete);
and have it invalidate the #product autocomplete() call and create a new one.
function resetAutocomplete() {
$("#product").autocomplete("destroy");
$("#product").autocomplete({
source:"product_auto_complete.php?postcode=" + $('#zipcode').val(),
minLength: 2,
select: function(event, ui){... }
});
}
You may want your resetAutocomplete() call to be a little smarter -- like checking if the zip code actually differs from the last value -- to save a few server calls.
This work for me. Override the event search:
jQuery('#Distribuidor_provincia_nombre').autocomplete({
'minLength':0,
'search':function(event,ui){
var newUrl="/conf/general/provincias?pais="+$("#Distribuidor_pais_id").val();
$(this).autocomplete("option","source",newUrl)
},
'source':[]
});
Hope this one will help someone:
$("#txt_venuename").autocomplete({
source: function(request, response) {
$.getJSON('<?php echo base_url(); ?>admin/venue/venues_autocomplete',
{
user_id: <?php echo $user_param_id; ?>,
term: request.term
},
response);
},
minLength: 3,
select: function (a, b) {
var selected_venue_id = b.item.v_id;
var selected_venue_name = b.item.label;
$("#h_venueid").val(selected_venue_id);
console.log(selected_venue_id);
}
});
The default 'term' will be replaced by the new parameters list, so you will require to add again.
$('#product').setOptions({
extraParams: {
extra_parameter_name_to_send: function(){
return $("#source_of_extra_parameter_name").val();
}
}
})
$('#txtCropname').autocomplete('Handler/CropSearch.ashx', {
extraParams: {
test: 'new'
}
});
Related
I am using the very simple to implement Trix Editor provided from Basecamp in an "Edit View".
How would one save automatically changes, without having the user to interact through the update button?
I am thinking about something like this:
(OLD SCRIPT)
window.setInterval(function() {
localStorage["editorState"] = JSON.stringify(element.editor)
}, 5000);
What I actually want to do:
post a ajax "post" request to the rails server. something like:
$('trix-editor').on('blur', function() {
var sendname = $('#note_name').val();
var sendlink = $('#linkinput').val();
var sendnote = $('input[name="note[note]"]').val();
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "/notes",
data: { note: { name: sendname, link: sendlink, note: sendnote } },
success: function(data) {
alert(data.id);
return false;
},
error: function(data) {
return false;
}
});
(There is as well the problem with authentification and devise. Only if you are loged in you should be able to send an ajax post request ..??)
Even better would be to save changes only when the user changes some data, and then wait 5s and then push the updated data via json to the server. I have no clue how to do that...
PS: would have loved to tag this question with a "trix-editor" tag, sorry have not enought rep for doing so...
If you are using plain JavaScript, use a hidden input field:
<form>
<input type="hidden" id="noticeEditorContent"/>
<trix-editor input="noticeEditorContent" id="x" style="min-height: 200px;"></trix-editor>
</form>
Now you have access to the element with the ID x.
Which means, with getElementById, you can do something like that:
var richTex = document.getElementById("x");
With this variable, you can either set an interval as you already explained, or you are using jQuery to do the job:
$('#x').on('input', function() {
localStorage["editorState"] = JSON.stringify($('#x').val());
});
Just a suggestion. You can write this code a bit nicer and cleaner.
Now it depends. Is setting an interval every 5 seconds better or writing every change to the LocalStorage?
Suggestion:
Save the input when the user deselects the field:
$('#x').on('blur', function() {
localStorage["editorState"] = JSON.stringify($('#x').val());
});
Update: Here is a working JSFiddle.
so I came up with this code which saves via ajax on 'trix-blur' (which fires when the user disselects the trix-editor). There is only the question left if this code is secure enought with devise, or if now anyone can send data to be saved?!?
I have the authentification in the notes controller like that:
before_action :authenticate_user!
and here is the javascript part (with a custom messages functionality):
$('trix-editor').on('trix-blur', function() {
var sendname = $('#note_name').val();
var sendlink = $('#linkinput').val();
var sendnote = $('input[name="note[note]"]').val();
var sendid = $('#note_id').val();
$.ajax({
type: "PUT",
url: "/notes/" + sendid,
dataType: "json",
data: { note: { name: sendname, link: sendlink, note: sendnote }, id: sendid, commit: "Update Note" },
success: function(data) {
addMessage('auto saved ...', 'msg-success');
return false;
},
error: function(data) {
alert('error');
return false;
}
});
var addMessage = function(msg, msgclass) {
$('#notifications').append('<div id="msg" class="msg '+msgclass+'">'+msg+'</div>');
setTimeout(function() {
$('#msg:last-child').addClass('msgvisible');
}, 100);
displayMessage();
};
var displayMessage = function() {
setTimeout(function() {
hideMessage();
}, 2000);
};
var hideMessage = function() {
$('#msg').addClass('msghide');
setTimeout( function() {
deleteMessage();
}, 300);
};
var deleteMessage = function() {
$('#msg').remove();
if ($('#notificatosn').find('#msg') > 1) {
displayMessage();
}
};
});
Per the Trix project page the trix-editor emits different events on specific conditions.
The trix-change event is what you need; it fires whenever the editor’s contents has changed.
So, the first line of your JavaScript code could be
$('trix-editor').on('trix-change', function() {
/* Here will be your code to save the editor's contents. */
})
How set in the drop-down list item selected by the user?
Scenario:
1. User not enter all required values in form
2. Click sent.
3. Page is refresh and value in dropdown list is not selected. How select the value?
I have working script which retrieve data for the list.
$('#userid').select2({
placeholder : " --- select ---",
minimumInputLength: 2,
ajax: {
url: "index.php?modul=getusers",
contentType: 'application/json; charset=utf-8',
dataType: 'json',
data: function (term, page) {
return {
q: term,
page_limit: 10
};
},
results: function (data, page) {
return { results: data };
}
},
allowClear: true,
formatSelection: function(data) {
return data.text;
}
});
Standard data in ajax call:
{"text":"sample text", "id":"1"}
Input:
<input type="text" value="<? echo $_POST['userid']; ?>" class="input" id="userid" name="userid">
I tried to add the following code, but it doesn't work
initSelection: function(element, callback) {
var id=$(element).val();
if (id!=="") {
$.ajax("index.php?modul=getusersfriend&q="+id, {
dataType: "json"
}).done(function(data) { callback(data); });
}
},
Make sure that you have a properly formatted JSON Object being returned in your call back in initSelection. The discussion for that has been addressed here already.
But so far looks good. You may want to bind the change event of the select or the submit event of the form to serialize its value before the form is submitted.
You can store its value on your server (yucky) or just serialize the form object and get the value to pass to initSelection when the select2 is loaded.
Which is what would happen here:
var id=$(element).val();
Here is a simple example of serializing your form.
PS: Don't really see what bootstrap has to do with anything.
I have a jQueryUI autocomplete that pulls from a list of customers and is attached based on the selector [input data-role="customer-search"]. Once a customer is selected, I make a AJAX call to get the full customer detail. This part I have working fine. The issue is that I am having trouble figuring out a way to incorporate knockout into this. My ideal situation is a custom binding like "onSelect: customerSelected", which would take in the selected Customer JSON and integrate it into the overall model, which would then cause updates to a bunch of fields on the page with bingings such as model.Customer.Address, model.Customer.Type.
The place I am butting my head against is that connection point after I've gotten the Customer JSON back from the AJAX call, how to send it to the "customerSelected" method on the viewmodel tied to the same input I attached the jQuery autocomplete.
Here is a simplified version of a bindinghandler my team wrote for handling autocomplete. When an item is selected, the item is inserted into an observable array in the view model. It is bound in the following manner:
<input type="text" data-bind="autoComplete:myObservableArray, source:'myUrl'" />
You can customize what happens when an item is selected in the 'select:' area.
ko.bindingHandlers.autoComplete = {
init: function (element, valueAccessor, allBindingsAccessor, viewModel, bindingContext) {
var postUrl = allBindingsAccessor().source; // url to post to is read here
var selectedObservableArrayInViewModel = valueAccessor();
$(element).autocomplete({
minLength: 2,
autoFocus: true,
source: function (request, response) {
$.ajax({
url: postUrl,
data: { term: request.term },
dataType: "json",
type: "POST",
success: function (data) {
response(data);
}
});
},
select: function (event, ui) {
var selectedItem = ui.item;
if (!_.any(selectedObservableArrayInViewModel(), function (item) { return item.id == selectedItem.id; })) { //ensure items with the same id cannot be added twice.
selectedObservableArrayInViewModel.push(selectedItem);
}
}
});
}
};
Hopefully, it's something like this that you're looking for. If you need something clarified, let me know.
Note Besides jquery and knockout, this example uses underscore.js ( the _.any() function)
valueUpdate: blur
data-bind="value: textbox, valueUpdate: blur" binding fixed the problem for me:
$(function() {
$(".autocomplete").autocomplete({
source: [
"ActionScript",
"AppleScript",
"Asp",
"BASIC",
"C",
"C++",
"Clojure",
"COBOL",
"ColdFusion",
"Scheme"]
});
});
var viewModel = {
textbox: ko.observable()
};
ko.applyBindings(viewModel);
<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/knockout/3.2.0/knockout-min.js"></script>
<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="//code.jquery.com/ui/1.11.3/jquery-ui.min.js"></script>
<input type="text" class="autocomplete" data-bind="value: textbox, valueUpdate: blur"/>
I have two JQuery UI autocomplete input fields.
When an option is selected in the first one, the value of the selection will be used as condition for a database query that will send the source data for the second autocomplete field.
My problem is how do I send the value of the first selection to the PHP page via Post method?
The code so far is shown below (this code is from a tutorial which used the GET method; but I want to use Post):
<script>
$("input#divisions").autocomplete ({
//this is the first input
source : [
{ value: "81", label: "City1" },
{ value: "82", label: "City2" },
{ value: "83", label: "City3" } ],
minLength : 0,
select: function(event, ui) {
$('#divisions').val(ui.item.label);
return false;
},
focus: function(event, ui){
$('#divisions').val(ui.item.label);
return false;
},
change: function(event, ui){
//the tutorial has this value sent by variables in the URL; I want the selection value sent by POST. How can I change this?
c_t_v_choices = "c_t_v_choices.php?filter=" + ui.item.value;
$("#c_t_v").autocomplete("option", "source", c_t_v_choices);
}
}).focus (function (event)
{
$(this).autocomplete ("search", "");
});
$("#c_t_v").autocomplete({
source: "",
minLength: 2,
select: function(event,ui){
//$('#city').val(ui.item.city);
}
});
</script>
Can anyone please help?
Dont hesitate to let me know if you have any questions.
The solution I found for this is to use AJAX to create the source when a selection is made in the first autocomplete.
Sample code can be found here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12715204/assigning-source-for-jquery-autocomplete
I've found here that to overwrite one of the autocomplete events. But can somebody please provide me with example how to do the same?
The appendTo option does indeed work as expected, and if you inspect at the DOM, the <ul> results element will be attached to the element. However, due to absolute positioning generated by jQueryUI, the list still appears directly under the <input>.
That said, you can override the internal _renderItem to directly append results to a completely different element, for example:
HTML
<input id="autocomplete"/>
<div class="test">Output goes here:<br/><ul></ul></div>
JavaScript
$('input').autocomplete({
search: function(event, ui) {
$('.test ul').empty();
},
source: ["something", "something-else"]
}).data('autocomplete')._renderItem = function(ul, item) {
return $('<li/>')
.data('item.autocomplete', item)
.append(item.value)
.appendTo($('.test ul'));
};
I have also created a demo to demonstrate this. Please note that the latest jQuery library has not had jQueryUI tested against it fully, so I am using the previous version which allows me to select to include jQueryUI directly with the jsFiddle options.
<div class="test">Output goes here:<br/></div>
<script>
$("input#autocomplete").autocomplete({
source: ["something", "something-else"],
appendTo: ".text",
position: { my: "left top", at: "left bottom", of: ".test" }
// other options here
});
</script>
I needed more control over where to put the data, so this is how I went about it:
$("#input").autocomplete({
minLength: 3,
source: [
"ActionScript",
"AppleScript",
"Asp"
],
response: function(event, ui) {
console.log(ui.content);
// put the content somewhere
},
open: function(event, ui) {
// close the widget
$(this).autocomplete('close');
}
});
hle's answer worked awesome for me and gives you more flexibility! Here is my test code that was modified by his answer:
$("#autocomplete").autocomplete({
minLength: 3,
source: ["something", "something-else"],
response: function(event, ui)
{
console.log(ui.content);
// put the content somewhere
},
open: function(event, ui)
{
// close the widget
$(this).autocomplete('close');
}
});
Although this question is pretty old but i got a pretty easy solution. No hack, nothing just in jQuery way:
Instead of autocomplete response function, just add response data in div on success
$(document).ready(function () {
$("#book-code-search").autocomplete({
minLength: 2,
delay: 500,
source: function (request, response) {
$.ajax( {
url: "server side path that returns json data",
data: { searchText: request.term, param2 : $("#type").val()},
type: "POST",
dataType: "json",
success: function( data ) {
$("#data-success").html(data.returnedData); //returnedData is json data return from server side response
/* response($.map(data, function (item) {
return {
label: item.FullDesc,
value: item.FullDesc
}
})) */
}
});
}
});
});
<link href="https://code.jquery.com/ui/1.12.1/themes/smoothness/jquery-ui.css" rel="stylesheet"/>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://code.jquery.com/ui/1.12.1/jquery-ui.js"></script>
<div id='data-success' style='color: green;'></div>
<input type='text' placeholder='Enter Book Code' id='book-code-search' />
<input type='hidden' id='type' value='book'>