Consider:
<form method="get" action="">
<select name="name">
<option value="a">a</option>
<option value="b">b</option>
</select>
<select name="location">
<option value="x">x</option>
<option value="y">y</option>
</select>
<input type="submit" value="Submit" class="submit" />
</form>
On submitting the form, how do I make sure that the selected values remain selected in the dropdowns? This form is inside WordPress (PHP).
To avoid many if-else structures, let JavaScript do the trick automatically:
<select name="name" id="name">
<option value="a">a</option>
<option value="b">b</option>
</select>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.getElementById('name').value = "<?php echo $_GET['name'];?>";
</script>
<select name="location" id="location">
<option value="x">x</option>
<option value="y">y</option>
</select>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.getElementById('location').value = "<?php echo $_GET['location'];?>";
</script>
Answer:
<select name="name">
<option <?php if ($_GET['name'] == 'a') { ?>selected="true" <?php }; ?>value="a">a</option>
<option <?php if ($_GET['name'] == 'b') { ?>selected="true" <?php }; ?>value="b">b</option>
</select>
Answer:
After trying all these “solutions”, nothing work. I did some research on W3Schools before and remember there was explanation of keeping values about radio.
But it also works for the Select
option. See below for an example. Just try it out and play with it.
<?php
$example = $_POST["example"];
?>
<form method="post">
<select name="example">
<option <?php if (isset($example) && $example=="a") echo "selected";?>>a</option>
<option <?php if (isset($example) && $example=="b") echo "selected";?>>b</option>
<option <?php if (isset($example) && $example=="c") echo "selected";?>>c</option>
</select>
<input type="submit" name="submit" value="submit" />
</form>
Answer:
Since WordPress already uses jQuery you can try something like this:
var POST=<?php echo json_encode($_POST); ?>;
for(k in POST){
$("#"+k).val(POST[k]);
}
Answer:
If you are using WordPress (as is the case with the OP), you can use the selected
function.
<form method="get" action="">
<select name="name">
<option value="a" <?php selected( isset($_POST['name']) ? $_POST['name'] : '', 'a' ); ?>>a</option>
<option value="b" <?php selected( isset($_POST['name']) ? $_POST['name'] : '', 'b' ); ?>>b</option>
</select>
<select name="location">
<option value="x" <?php selected( isset($_POST['location']) ? $_POST['location'] : '', 'x' ); ?>>x</option>
<option value="y" <?php selected( isset($_POST['location']) ? $_POST['location'] : '', 'y' ); ?>>y</option>
</select>
<input type="submit" value="Submit" class="submit" />
</form>
Answer:
JavaScript only solution:
var tmpParams = decodeURIComponent(window.location.search.substr(1)).split("&");
for (var i = 0; i < tmpParams.length; i++) {
var tmparr = tmpParams[i].split("=");
var tmp = document.getElementsByName(tmparr[0])[0];
if (!!tmp){
document.getElementsByName(tmparr[0])[0].value = tmparr[1];
}
}
Or if you are using jQuery you can replace
var tmp = document.getElementsByName(tmparr[0])[0];
if (!!tmp){
document.getElementsByName(tmparr[0])[0].value = tmparr[1];
}
with:
$('*[name="'+tmparr[0]+'"]').val(tmparr[1]);
Answer:
Try this solution for keep selected value in dropdown:
<form action="<?php echo get_page_link(); ?>" method="post">
<select name="<?php echo $field_key['key']; ?>" onchange="javascript:
submit()">
<option value="">All Category</option>
<?php
foreach( $field['choices'] as $key => $value ){
if($post_key==$key){ ?>
<option value="<?php echo $key; ?>" selected><?php echo $value; ?></option>
<?php
}else{?>
<option value="<?php echo $key; ?>"><?php echo $value; ?></option>
<?php }
}?>
</select>
</form>
Answer:
This works for me!
<label for="reason">Reason:</label>
<select name="reason" size="1" id="name" >
<option value="NG" selected="SELECTED"><?php if (!(strcmp("NG", $_POST["reason"]))) {echo "selected=\"selected\"";} ?>Selection a reason below</option>
<option value="General"<?php if (!(strcmp("General", $_POST["reason"]))) {echo "selected=\"selected\"";} ?>>General Question</option>
<option value="Account"<?php if (!(strcmp("Account", $_POST["reason"]))) {echo "selected=\"selected\"";} ?>>Account Question</option>
<option value="Other"<?php if (!(strcmp("Other", $_POST["reason"]))) {echo "selected=\"selected\"";} ?>>Other</option>
</select>
Answer:
Just change this line:
<input type="submit" value="Submit" class="submit" />
with this line:
<input type="submit" value="Submit/Reload" class="submit" onclick="history.go(-1);">
Answer:
I don’t work in WordPress much, but for forms outside of WordPress, this works well.
PHP
location = ""; // Declare variable
if($_POST) {
if(!$_POST["location"]) {
$error .= "Location is required.<br />"; // If not selected, add string to error message
}else{
$location = $_POST["location"]; // If selected, assign to variable
}
HTML
<select name="location">
<option value="0">Choose...</option>
<option value="1" <?php if (isset($location) && $location == "1") echo "selected" ?>>location 1</option>
<option value="2" <?php if (isset($location) && $location == "2") echo "selected" ?>>location 2</option>
</select>
Answer:
<form method="get" action="">
<select name="name" value="<?php echo $_GET['name'];?>">
<option value="a">a</option>
<option value="b">b</option>
</select>
<select name="location" value="<?php echo $_GET['location'];?>">
<option value="x">x</option>
<option value="y">y</option>
</select>
<input type="submit" value="Submit" class="submit" />
</form>