2

Is there a way to use a variable in the name= parameter.

I would like to be able to do:

var a = 1;

$("#gen_p").html($("input:radio[name='gen'+a]:checked").val()));

I am able to do $("#gen_p"+a) but not in the [name=??]

Have I missed something?

Thanks

4 Answers 4

10
$("#gen_p").html($("input:radio[name='gen"+a+"']:checked").val());​​

You're mixing some single quotes in there.

EDIT: You were also having some extra ) in there.

11
  • Heads up to the OP: this one was first. Jun 9, 2010 at 0:31
  • 1
    @Samir - Why do you care? Maybe Sarfraz would have been first if he wasn't taking the time to edit the question for the OP.
    – user113716
    Jun 9, 2010 at 0:36
  • 1
    @Me-and-Coding - He has $().html($().val()));, that's one extra ) in there. It should be $().html($().val()); <- .html() closing )
    – Ben
    Jun 9, 2010 at 1:04
  • @Me-and-Coding - Easy way to tell, count all of them. There are 9. Should be an even number.
    – user113716
    Jun 9, 2010 at 1:05
  • Thanks to all. I thought I had tried that, but obviously not.
    – Ian
    Jun 9, 2010 at 1:05
3

Yes, you can do that, but you put single quotes within the double quotes, so it's reading it literally as "'gen'+a", not "gen" + a.

Try this:

$("#gen_p").html($("input:radio[name=gen" + a + "]:checked").val()));
3

You are missing double quotes as well as + operator there:

var a = 1;
$("#gen_p").html($("input:radio[name='gen'" + a + "]:checked").val()));

In javascript, variables should not come inside single/double quotes, rather they should be put outside of them and separated with + operator (which is also concatenation operator in javascript).

1

When quotes get messy, I prefer using string replace.

var selector = "input:radio[name='gen{a}']:checked".replace("{a}", a);

$("#gen_p").html($(selector).val());

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