1

I have a simple form like this:

<form method="post" id="login">

Username: <input type="text" value="" name="usr" />
Password: <input type="password" value="" name="pw"/>
<input type="submit" id="log" name="log" value="Login" style="width:250px;"/><br/>

</form>

But i keep getting cannot read property for my javascript with this line:

var usr = login.usr.value;
var pw = login.pw.value;

What is the reason i get this error ?

5
  • I hope you have var login = document.getElementById('login') in there somewhere... Jan 29, 2013 at 20:59
  • Kolink - there are no IDs defined, so that will not work. Jan 29, 2013 at 21:00
  • Are you waiting for the DOM to load?
    – apsillers
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:01
  • windows.onload is used yes :)
    – Sir
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:03
  • @Kolink it's an old [though terrible] JavaScript convention that an HTML form with a name attribute will be available as a global variable with that name, and inputs with names inside that form will be accessible as named properties of that variable. See this.
    – glomad
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:24

5 Answers 5

1

Try to give your form a name and change your code like below :

<form method="post" id="login" name="login">

Username: <input type="text" value="" name="usr" />
Password: <input type="password" value="" name="pw"/>
<input type="submit" id="log" name="log" value="Login" style="width:250px;"/><br/>

</form>

and the in your javascript :

var usr = document.login.usr.value;

You can check here (jsfiddle link).

4
  • Ah thats the ticket. Form name rather than id!
    – Sir
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:03
  • There are many ways to do it, since you used name I implemented it using the name but you can do it with id as well using document.getElementById() Jan 29, 2013 at 21:05
  • However form name will not validate in some cases
    – mplungjan
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:06
  • It is not valid xhtml strict for example
    – mplungjan
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:07
0

<input type="text" value="" name="usr" /> does not magically become the variable login.usr, you need to define the value based on the DOM.

var usr = document.login.usr.value;
5
  • ok that fixed the initial problem but that gives Cannot read property 'usr' of undefined
    – Sir
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:01
  • In Firefox, Chrome, and IE it seems to do so: jsfiddle.net/dAE6X, since the DOM element with the id of login gets a JS variable of the same name, and form elements are added as subproperties of the form element according to their name. (I know it's horribly gross, but that doesn't mean it's causing the OP's problem.) ...Or did I make a mistake in my own fiddle code, somehow?
    – apsillers
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:02
  • This does not work with a form with an ID only in several browsers
    – mplungjan
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:14
  • For scripting, I prefer to use IDs, mainly because I use jQuery, and getting a value by ID in jQuery is very short. Jan 29, 2013 at 21:28
  • Actually it does magically become the variable login.usr in a lot of browsers, unfortunately. (If the form is named "login", that is.) this code works in Chrome, IE and Firefox, for example.
    – glomad
    Jan 29, 2013 at 21:34
0

Try using getElementsByName:

The getElementsByName() method accesses all elements with the specified name.

var usr = document.getElementsByName('usr')[0].value;
var pw = document.getElementsByName('pw')[0].value;

http://jsfiddle.net/L3RvL/

0

Method 1:

<form method="post" id="login">
  Username: <input type="text" value="" name="usr" />

var form = document.getElementById("login"); //DOM access
var usr = form.elements["usr"]; // Forms access

Method 2 - not valid xhtml:

<form method="post" name="login">
  Username: <input type="text" value="" name="usr" />

var form = document.login; // Forms access
var usr = form.elements["usr"]; // Forms access

Method 3:

<form method="post">
  Username: <input type="text" value="" name="usr" />

var usr = document.getElementsByName("usr")[0]; // first field on page named this

Method 4: - preferred these days since ID MUST be unique - less useful if there are more forms with usr on the page that needs same validation

<form method="post">
  Username: <input type="text" value="" id="usr" name="usr" />

var usr = document.getElementById("usr");
0

Works in every browser:

   document.forms["login"].elements["usr"].value;
   document.forms["login"].elements["pw"].value;

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