249

If a form is submitted but not by any specific button, such as

  • by pressing Enter
  • using HTMLFormElement.submit() in JS

how is a browser supposed to determine which of multiple submit buttons, if any, to use as the one pressed?

This is significant on two levels:

  • calling an onclick event handler attached to a submit button
  • the data sent back to the web server

My experiments so far have shown that:

  • when pressing Enter, Firefox, Opera and Safari use the first submit button in the form
  • when pressing Enter, IE uses either the first submit button or none at all depending on conditions I haven't been able to figure out
  • all these browsers use none at all for a JS submit

What does the standard say?

If it would help, here's my test code (the PHP is relevant only to my method of testing, not to my question itself)

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
                      "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
<title>Test</title>
</head>

<body>

<h1>Get</h1>
<dl>
<?php foreach ($_GET as $k => $v) echo "<dt>$k</dt><dd>$v</dd>"; ?>
</dl>

<h1>Post</h1>
<dl>
<?php foreach ($_POST as $k => $v) echo "<dt>$k</dt><dd>$v</dd>"; ?>
</dl>

<form name="theForm" method="<?php echo isset($_GET['method']) ? $_GET['method'] : 'get'; ?>" action="<?php echo $_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']; ?>">
    <input type="text" name="method" />
    <input type="submit" name="action" value="Button 1" onclick="alert('Button 1'); return true" />
    <input type="text" name="stuff" />
    <input type="submit" name="action" value="Button 2" onclick="alert('Button 2'); return true" />
    <input type="button" value="submit" onclick="document.theForm.submit();" />
</form>

</body></html>
0

15 Answers 15

129

If you submit the form via JavaScript (i.e., formElement.submit() or anything equivalent), then none of the submit buttons are considered successful and none of their values are included in the submitted data. (Note that if you submit the form by using submitElement.click() then the submit that you had a reference to is considered active; this doesn't really fall under the remit of your question since here the submit button is unambiguous but I thought I'd include it for people who read the first part and wonder how to make a submit button successful via JavaScript form submission. Of course, the form's onsubmit handlers will still fire this way whereas they wouldn't via form.submit() so that's another kettle of fish...)

If the form is submitted by hitting Enter while in a non-textarea field, then it's actually down to the user agent to decide what it wants here. The specifications don't say anything about submitting a form using the Enter key while in a text entry field (if you tab to a button and activate it using space or whatever, then there's no problem as that specific submit button is unambiguously used). All it says is that a form must be submitted when a submit button is activated. It's not even a requirement that hitting Enter in e.g. a text input will submit the form.

I believe that Internet Explorer chooses the submit button that appears first in the source; I have a feeling that Firefox and Opera choose the button with the lowest tabindex, falling back to the first defined if nothing else is defined. There's also some complications regarding whether the submits have a non-default value attribute IIRC.

The point to take away is that there is no defined standard for what happens here and it's entirely at the whim of the browser - so as far as possible in whatever you're doing, try to avoid relying on any particular behaviour. If you really must know, you can probably find out the behaviour of the various browser versions, but when I investigated this a while back there were some quite convoluted conditions (which of course are subject to change with new browser versions) and I'd advise you to avoid it if possible!

2
  • 2
    Re para 2: My basic question was whether there's anything in any spec to the effect of "If the browser provides any means of submitting a form without specifying a submit control...". But I gather from David's reply that there isn't. My point about IE was that sometimes pressing Enter submits a form and doesn't set any submit button. A consequence is that, if you have multiple forms submitting to the same script, you can't rely on submit buttons to distinguish them. This came up in the project I'm working on.
    – Stewart
    May 29, 2009 at 11:06
  • 1
    Very useful first paragraph bracket section - thanks.
    – rbassett
    Jan 22, 2019 at 19:30
81

HTML 4 does not make it explicit. HTML 5 specifies that the first submit button must be the default:

4.10.21.2 Implicit submission

A form element's default button is the first submit button in tree order whose form owner is that form element.

If the user agent supports letting the user submit a form implicitly (for example, on some platforms hitting the "enter" key while a text control is focused implicitly submits the form), then doing so for a form, whose default button has activation behavior and is not disabled, must cause the user agent to fire a click event at that default button.

If you want to influence which one is "first" while maintaining the visual order then there are a couple of approaches you could take.

An off-screen, unfocusable button.

.hidden-default {
    position: absolute;
    left: -9999px;
}
<form>
  <input name="text">
  <button name="submit" value="wanted" class="hidden-default" tabindex="-1"></button>
  <button name="submit" value="not wanted">Not the default</button>
  <button name="submit" value="wanted">Looks like the default</button>
</form>

Flexbox order:

.ordering {
    display: inline-flex;
}

.ordering button {
    order: 2;
}

.ordering button + button {
    order: 1;
}
<form>
  <input name="text">
  <div class="ordering">
    <button name="submit" value="wanted">First in document order</button>
    <button name="submit" value="not wanted">Second in document order</button>
  </div>
</form>

2
  • @user5480949 — The default value for the type attribute is submit. This answer is about which submit button is the default, not about the different ways you can create submit buttons.
    – Quentin
    Aug 29, 2022 at 12:26
  • I feel confused about what a "submit button" is in spec. A <input type=submit />? Or also <button type=submit />?
    – Jack Lu
    Jun 3, 2023 at 15:23
67

Andrezj's answer pretty much got it nailed... but here's an easy cross-browser solution.

Take a form like this:

<form>
    <input/>
    <button type="submit" value="some non-default action"/>
    <button type="submit" value="another non-default action"/>
    <button type="submit" value="yet another non-default action"/>

    <button type="submit" value="default action"/>
</form>

and refactor to this:

<form>
    <input/>

    <button style="overflow: visible !important; height: 0 !important; width: 0 !important; margin: 0 !important; border: 0 !important; padding: 0 !important; display: block !important;" type="submit" value="default action"/>

    <button type="submit" value="some non-default action"/>
    <button type="submit" value="another non-default action"/>
    <button type="submit" value="yet another non-default action"/>
    <button type="submit" value="still another non-default action"/>

    <button type="submit" value="default action"/>
</form>

Since the W3C specification indicates multiple submit buttons are valid, but omits guidance as to how the user-agent should handle them, the browser manufacturers are left to implement as they see fit. I've found they'll either submit the first submit button in the form, or submit the next submit button after the form field that currently has focus.

Unfortunately, simply adding a style of display: none; won't work because the W3C spec indicates any hidden element should be excluded from user interactions. So hide it in plain sight instead!

Above is an example of the solution I ended up putting into production. Hitting the enter key triggers the default form submission is behavior as expected, even when other non-default values are present and precede the default submit button in the DOM. Bonus for mouse/keyboard interaction with explicit user inputs while avoiding JavaScript handlers.

Note: tabbing through the form will not display focus for any visual element yet will still cause the invisible button to be selected. To avoid this issue, simply set tabindex attributes accordingly and omit a tabindex attribute on the invisible submit button. While it may seem out of place to promote these styles to !important, they should prevent any framework or existing button styles from interfering with this fix. Also, those inline styles are definitely poor form, but we're proving concepts here... not writing production code.

7
  • 5
    Thanks. Stumbled across the display: none problem as well. Instead of minimizing the button you could also move it out of the page by surronding it with a <div style="position: fixed; left: -1000px; top: -1000px />. Just one more thing to concern: Just minimizing or moving away the button from the page flow with CSS might bring up WAI issues, because screen readers will still see the default button. Mar 28, 2012 at 8:59
  • 1
    this worked for me, thanks. I had to add this for the button border:none; to make it complitely disapear May 13, 2013 at 23:35
  • 4
    You can just set the tabindex attribute of the hidden button to -1
    – tvanc
    Oct 4, 2013 at 2:33
  • 3
    What's that <input/> up there for?
    – Sz.
    Dec 22, 2013 at 23:14
  • 1
    @lunakid <input /> is there to show the placement of input-level form elements (textarea, radio, checkboxes, inputs, etc) in relation to the submit buttons.
    – James
    Mar 12, 2014 at 16:19
26

This can now be solved using Flexbox:

HTML

<form>
    <h1>My Form</h1>
    <label for="text">Input:</label>
    <input type="text" name="text" id="text"/>

    <!-- Put the elements in reverse order -->
    <div class="form-actions">
        <button>Ok</button> <!-- Our default action is first -->
        <button>Cancel</button>
    </div>
</form>

CSS

.form-actions {
    display: flex;
    flex-direction: row-reverse; /* Reverse the elements inside */
}

Explanation

Using Flexbox, we can reverse the order of the elements in a container that uses display: flex by also using the CSS rule: flex-direction: row-reverse. This requires no CSS or hidden elements. For older browsers that do not support Flexbox, they still get a workable solution but the elements will not be reversed.

Demo

http://codepen.io/Godwin/pen/rLVKjm

1
  • Bootstrap has also a convinient class for it: flex-row-reverse Nov 30, 2023 at 12:38
17

I think this post would help if someone wants to do it with jQuery:

http://greatwebguy.com/programming/dom/default-html-button-submit-on-enter-with-jquery/

The basic solution is:

$(function() {
    $("form input").keypress(function (e) {
    if ((e.which && e.which == 13) || (e.keyCode && e.keyCode == 13)) {
        $('input[type=submit].default').click();
        return false;
    }
    else {
        return true;
    }
    });
});

And another I liked was:

jQuery(document).ready(function() {
    $("form input, form select").live('keypress', function (e) {
        if ($(this).parents('form').find('button[type=submit].default, input[type=submit].default').length <= 0)
            return true;

        if ((e.which && e.which == 13) || (e.keyCode && e.keyCode == 13)) {
            $(this).parents('form').find('button[type=submit].default, input[type=submit].default').click();
            return false;
        }
        else {
            return true;
        }
    });
});
4
  • jQuery.Event always has its .wich attribute. Also no need to fall back to DOM's .keyCode (or .charCode for that matter).
    – Arjan
    Dec 20, 2011 at 21:15
  • Another issue regarding jQuery here is the unneccessary double query. Since there is no need to return true, additionally, the jQuery version gets really clear and short on integrating reductions advised by Arjan before.
    – soletan
    Sep 26, 2012 at 16:10
  • I used keydown instead of keypress (avoid waiting for keyup) and I added e.preventDefault(); into the beginning of this function to avoid execution of the "real" default button. Works really well.
    – Matt Roy
    Jun 16, 2017 at 19:50
  • The link is broken (404). Sep 25, 2021 at 15:49
7

I had a form with 11 submit buttons on it, and it would always use the first submit button when the user pressed Enter. I read elsewhere that it is not a good idea (bad practice) to have more than one submit button on a form, and the best way to do this is have the button you want as default, as the only submit button on the form. The other buttons should be made into "TYPE=BUTTON" and an onClick event added that calls your own submit routine in JavaScript. Something like this:

<SCRIPT Language="JavaScript">
function validform()
{
  // Do whatever you need to validate the form, and return true or false accordingly
}

function mjsubmit()
{
  if (validform()) { document.form1.submit(); return true;}
  return false;
}
</SCRIPT>
<INPUT TYPE=BUTTON NAME="button1" VALUE="button1" onClick="document.form1.submitvalue='button1'; return mjsubmit();">
<INPUT TYPE=BUTTON NAME="button2" VALUE="button2" onClick="document.form1.submitvalue='button2'; return mjsubmit();">
<INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT NAME="button3" VALUE="button3" onClick="document.form1.submitvalue='button3'; return validform();">
<INPUT TYPE=BUTTON NAME="button4" VALUE="button4" onClick="document.form1.submitvalue='button4'; return mjsubmit();">

Here, button3 is the default, and although you are programmatically submitting the form with the other buttons, the mjsubmit routine validates them.

9
  • 23
    Bad idea. Your form won't work with JS disabled. JS ought to be used unobtrusively.
    – BalusC
    Mar 17, 2010 at 13:07
  • 7
    Very few browsers have JS turned off by default, even the ones on iPods! On the form I was citing, JS off would render it useless! So much hinges on JS running.
    – graphic
    Mar 17, 2010 at 13:21
  • 9
    Turned off by default or not, those who have JS disabled ought not to have to switch it on just to get around such a silly little snag as this.
    – Stewart
    Mar 20, 2010 at 15:46
  • 2
    what kind of form has 11 submit buttons?? (curiosity)
    – Ben
    May 27, 2011 at 4:10
  • 3
    The biggest reason I see validating unobtrusive Javascript is that obtrusive Javascript tends to be fiddly. I'm not sure how to qualify what I'm thinking, but when I see pages absolutely reliant on JS, I'm also betting I can do some tricky stuff with my DOM and do something unintended on the server. Jan 16, 2012 at 23:56
3
<form onsubmit="alert('submit');return false;">
    <input name="username">
    <input name="password" type="password">
    <button onclick="if(document.activeElement === this){alert('button 1');}else{default_submit.click();}return false;">button 1</button>
    <button onclick="if(document.activeElement === this){alert('button 2');}else{default_submit.click();}return false;">button 2</button>
    <input id="default_submit" type="submit">
</form>

If you press Enter from text input, then the button will not become focused. Then we ignore this click and click the default submit instead, but if you click the button by mouse, it will be focused, then we apply this click.

Demo: https://codepen.io/remon-reffat/pen/mdRaXbp

2

I struggled with the same question since I had a submit button in the middle of the form which redirected submit to another page, like so:

<button type="submit" onclick="this.form.action = '#another_page'">More</button>

When the user pressed the Enter key, this button was clicked instead of another submit button.

So I did some primitive tests by creating a form with multiple submit buttons and different visibility options and an onclick event alerting which button was clicked: https://jsfiddle.net/aqfy51om/1/

Browsers and OSes I used for testing:

Windows

OS X

  • Google Chrome 43
  • Safari 7.1.6

Most of these browsers clicked the very first button despite the visibility options applied except Internet Explorer and Safari which clicked the third button, which is "visible" inside a "hidden" container:

<div style="width: 0; height: 0; overflow: hidden;">
    <button type="submit" class="btn btn-default" onclick="alert('Hidden submit button #3 was clicked');">Hidden submit button #3</button>
</div>

So my suggestion, which I'm going to use myself, is:

If your form has multiple submit buttons with different meanings, then include a submit button with the default action at the beginning of the form which is either:

  1. Fully visible
  2. Wrapped in a container with style="width: 0; height: 0; overflow: hidden;"

Another option might be to offset the button (still at the beginning of the from) style="position: absolute; left: -9999px; top: -9999px;", just tried it in Internet Explorer - worked , but I have no idea what else it can screw up, for example printing..

1

From your comments:

A consequence is that, if you have multiple forms submitting to the same script, you can't rely on submit buttons to distinguish them.

I drop an <input type="hidden" value="form_name" /> into each form.

If submitting with JavaScript: add submit events to forms, not click events to their buttons. Savvy users don't touch their mouse very often.

1
1

When you have multiple submit buttons in a single form and a user presses the Enter key to submit the form from a text field, this code overrides default functionality, by calling the submit event on the form from the key press event. Here is that code:

$('form input').keypress(function(e){

    if ((e.which && e.which == 13) || (e.keyCode && e.keyCode == 13)){
        $(e.target).closest('form').submit(); return false;
    }
    else
        return true;
});
1
  • Simple and fixes the issue
    – toddmo
    Apr 12, 2018 at 17:39
1

Strange that the first button Enter goes always to the first button regardless is visible or not, e.g. using jQuery show/hide(). Adding attribute .attr('disabled', 'disabled') prevent receiving the Enter submit button completely. It's a problem for example when adjusting the Insert/Edit+Delete button visibility in record dialogs. I found it less hackish and simple placing Edit in front of Insert:

<button type="submit" name="action" value="update">Update</button>
<button type="submit" name="action" value="insert">Insert</button>
<button type="submit" name="action" value="delete">Delete</button>

And use JavaScript code:

$("#formId button[type='submit'][name='action'][value!='insert']").hide().attr('disabled', 'disabled');
$("#formId button[type='submit'][name='action'][value='insert']").show().removeAttr('disabled');
0

My recipe:

<form>
    <input type=hidden name=action value=login> <!-- The magic! -->

    <input type=text name=email>
    <input type=text name=password>

    <input type=submit name=action value=login>
    <input type=submit name=action value="forgot password">
</form>

It will send the default hidden field if none of the buttons are 'clicked'.

If one is clicked, it has preference and its value is passed.

7
  • 3
    But is this behaviour specified by the standard? And can browsers be trusted to implement it correctly?
    – Stewart
    Apr 8, 2011 at 8:48
  • good question. i've tested it to work on all A browsers (from yui browser matrix) and it's the most consitent i could get in real life (regardless of what the standards specify)
    – gcb
    Apr 18, 2011 at 10:04
  • 1
    my mistake, I changed {type="hidden"} and i didnot notice the same 'name' values. Aug 28, 2013 at 5:08
  • 1
    This doesn't work for me in IE11 or Fx30. The value is always set to the hidden value. Jun 4, 2014 at 11:18
  • 1
    This does not have the desired behavior in the latest versions of Chrome and Firefox. The "action" parameter always contains the value "login" for implicit submissions. This would be an elegant solution, but cannot be relied upon. May 19, 2015 at 0:52
0

Another solution I've used is to just have one button in the form, and fake the other buttons.

Here's an example:

<form>
  <label for="amount">Amount of items</label>
  <input id="amount" type="text" name="amount" />
  <span id="checkStock" class="buttonish">Check stock</span>
  <button type="submit" name="action" value="order">Place order</button>
</form>

I then style the span elements to look like a button. A JavaScript listener observes the span and performs the desired operation once clicked.

It’s not necessarily right for all situations, but at least it’s pretty easy to do.

2
  • 1
    What's the fallback for users who have JS disabled?
    – Stewart
    Oct 4, 2012 at 22:11
  • 1
    Users with JS disabled won't be able to use the internet, it's as simple as that nowadays. Feb 9, 2016 at 20:41
0

From the HTML 4 specification:

If a form contains more than one submit button, only the activated submit button is successful.

This means that given more than one submit button and none activated (clicked), none should be successful.

And I'd argue this makes sense:

Imagine a huge form with multiple submit-buttons. At the top, there is a "delete this record"-button, then lots of inputs follow and at the bottom there is an "update this record"-button. A user hitting Enter while in a field at the bottom of the form would never suspect that he/she implicitly hits the "delete this record" from the top.

Therefore I think it is not a good idea to use the first or any other button it the user does not define (click) one. Nevertheless, browsers are doing it of course.

-1

To determine what button is pressed when hitting enter, you can mark it up with type="submit", and the other buttons mark them with type="button". For example:

<input type="button" value="Cancel" />
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />

Sorry, when writing this answer I was thinking about submit buttons in the general sense. The answer below is not about multiple type="submit" buttons, as it leaves only one type="submit" and change the other to type="button". I leave the answer here as reference in case helps someone that can change the type in their form.

9
  • Type "button" does not cause the form to submit. It's used only to trigger client-side scripts.
    – Stewart
    Aug 1, 2013 at 15:39
  • exactly, that's why the browser skips it when you hit enter, and the one with type "submit" gets executed. You can use the one with type "button" to do anything else on click for example. Please remove the negative vote. Aug 1, 2013 at 16:57
  • The question was about multiple submit buttons.
    – Stewart
    Aug 1, 2013 at 17:13
  • My example is totally valid for multiple submit buttons. The one with type "submit" is the one determined by the browser to act as pressed (which is what the question was about). Then with the other button you can use it as submit button as well using JavaScript events like the onClick event that you have in your example. So my answer is relevant and don't deserve a down vote. Please remove it. Aug 2, 2013 at 9:22
  • 1
    If your point was to suggest removing the ambiguity by making only one of them type "submit" and using JavaScript to implement the other buttons, then this is a duplicate of graphic's reply and as such has already been dismissed as a bad idea.
    – Stewart
    Aug 11, 2013 at 18:24

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