1

I've got a form with a table with originally 1 row of input fields. Users can click the "New Row" button to get another row, with empty input fields. This is all working well but I need to also increment the ID numbers at the same time for the new Row.

I've setup a sample JSFiddle at:

http://jsfiddle.net/fmdataweb/vRe9v/2/

I've seen some examples here and on other sites about how to do this but I can't incorporate the code into my existing Javascript without breaking it. Here's the Javascript:

var table = $( '#nextYear' )[0];

$( table ).delegate( '#button2', 'click', function () {

var thisRow = $( this ).closest( 'tr' )[0];
$( thisRow ).clone().insertAfter( thisRow ).find( 'input:text' ).val( '' );
$(this).remove();
});​

Really appreciate it if someone can show me how to extend my existing Javascript to increment the ID's at the same time as creating the new Row.

3
  • Why do you need ids at all in this situation?
    – nnnnnn
    Aug 15, 2012 at 12:29
  • I'm going to be adding some additional scripts that use Typeahead and also enter enter an option into the select menu based on what was entered in the first activity field. I've taken these out whilst I get the incrementing of the ID's sorted out first.
    – user982124
    Aug 15, 2012 at 12:30
  • I was just thinking that normally with repeated rows you can get by with classes and DOM traversal methods rather than ids.
    – nnnnnn
    Aug 15, 2012 at 12:42

2 Answers 2

1

Check this fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/2Ds4J/1/

Added a little code to increment the IDs of all inputs and selects in the cloned row before inserting it into the DOM.

var newIDSuffix = 2;
$( table ).delegate( '#button2', 'click', function () {
    var thisRow = $( this ).closest( 'tr' )[0];

    var cloned = $( thisRow ).clone();
    cloned.find('input, select').each(function() {
         var id = $(this).attr('id');
         id = id.substring(0, id.length-1) + newIDSuffix;
         $(this).attr('id', id);
    });

    cloned.insertAfter( thisRow ).find( 'input:text' ).val( '' );

    newIDSuffix++;
});
3
  • Thanks techfoobar - that appears to work well. I noticed that the code to remove the "New Button" so it only appears once has been removed/broken. I've added it back in: $(this).remove(); but this only lets me click the button twice for a maximum of 3 rows. Any idea how to get this functionality back? Thanks for your help.
    – user982124
    Aug 15, 2012 at 12:54
  • The button stops working because it gets a new id that doesn't match the selector in .delegate("#button2"... You could change the selector to use a class, or .delegate('input[type="button"]', ...
    – nnnnnn
    Aug 15, 2012 at 13:16
  • Thanks @nnnnnn - it's working great now. Learnt a lot tonight.
    – user982124
    Aug 15, 2012 at 14:14
1
var table = $( '#nextYear' )[0],
    nextId = 2;

$( table ).delegate( '#button2', 'click', function () {

    var thisRow = $( this ).closest( 'tr' )[0];
    $(thisRow).clone().insertAfter(thisRow).find('input:text').val('')
         .attr('id',function(i,oldVal){ return oldVal.replace(/\d+/,nextId); });
    $(this).remove();
    nextId++;
});​

By way of explanation, if you call the .attr() method with a callback function the callback will be called once for each element in the jQuery object and the return value used to set the attribute in that element.

2
  • Thanks nnnnnn - that works well however I just noticed that it only increments the text inputs but not the select menu?
    – user982124
    Aug 15, 2012 at 12:55
  • Ah, that's because I just copied the selector from your code. Try .find(":input") instead of "input:text".
    – nnnnnn
    Aug 15, 2012 at 13:11

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