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I'm trying to write a simple form. The form basically need to validate 2 mandatory drop down fields upon clicking the submit button by highlighting the labels if nothing was selected.

I have this working fine, but its so long and chunky atm that I must ask, is there a way to simply this?

function submitCheck() {
    if (formTest.connection.value.length==0 && formTest.location.value.length==0) {
        document.getElementById("connection").style.color = "#961515";
        document.getElementById("location").style.color = "#961515";
        document.getElementById("connection").style.fontStyle = "italic";
        document.getElementById("location").style.fontStyle = "italic";
    } else if (formTest.connection.value.length==0 && formTest.location.value.length!=0) {
        document.getElementById("connection").style.color = "#961515";
        document.getElementById("connection").style.fontStyle = "italic";
        document.getElementById("location").style.color = "#000000";
        document.getElementById("location").style.fontStyle = "normal";
    } else if (formTest.location.value.length==0 && !formTest.connection.value.length!=0) {
        document.getElementById("location").style.color = "#961515";
        document.getElementById("location").style.fontStyle = "italic";
        document.getElementById("connection").style.color = "#000000";
        document.getElementById("connection").style.fontStyle = "normal";
    } else {
        document.getElementById("connection").style.color = "#000000";
        document.getElementById("location").style.color = "#000000";
        document.getElementById("location").style.fontStyle = "normal";
        document.getElementById("connection").style.fontStyle = "normal";
        document.getElementById("flashTest").sendValFromHtml(postcodeVal.value);
    }
}

4 Answers 4

4

Assuming the elements are of type input In CSS:

input{
  color: #000000;
  font-style: normal;
}

.invalid {
   color: #961515;
   font-style: italic;
}

In JS:

function submitCheck() {
    var hasConnection = formTest.connection.value.length != 0; 
    var hasLocation = formTest.location.value.length != 0;

    document.getElementById("connection").className = hasConnection ? "" : "invalid";
    document.getElementById("location").className = hasLocation ? "" : "invalid";

    if(hasConnection && hasLocation){
        document.getElementById("flashTest").sendValFromHtml(postcodeVal.value);
    }
}

Note, i'm using a primitive way of setting class names, for a more complete solution use this answer or use a framework like jquery.

I think this is a better approach because it separates the styles from the javascript.

4
  • +1. I started to revise my answer to something a bit like this and then saw you'd already done it much better. Definitely better to set classes rather than individual style properties.
    – nnnnnn
    Feb 7, 2012 at 4:24
  • sure, basically in your html file, place the styles at the top in the <head> section, and then just copy the javascript code I posted. Here's an example: w3schools.com/css/css_howto.asp
    – driangle
    Feb 7, 2012 at 4:49
  • Thank you @ggreiner. Do you know why I'm getting an error saying connection is not defined - document.getElementById("flashTest").sendValFromHtml(connection.value);
    – muudless
    Feb 7, 2012 at 6:06
  • well, you have to define a variable before you use it. I assume you want to get the value of the connection input, in that case you can do document.getElementById("flashTest").sendValFromHtml(formTest.connection.value);
    – driangle
    Feb 7, 2012 at 7:02
2

Just make a function out of the 4 lines that get repeated all over:

function setStyles(color1, color2, style1, style2) {
    document.getElementById("connection").style.color = color1;
    document.getElementById("location").style.color = color2;
    document.getElementById("connection").style.fontStyle = style1;
    document.getElementById("location").style.fontStyle = style2;
}

And you can replace each block with a simple function call such as:

setStyles("#961515", "#000000", "italic", "normal");

Your updated code would look something like:

function submitCheck() {
    if (formTest.connection.value.length==0 && formTest.location.value.length==0) {
        setStyles("#961515", "#961515", "italic", "italic");
    } else if (formTest.connection.value.length==0 && formTest.location.value.length!=0) {
        setStyles(...);
    } else {
        ...
    }
}
4
  • Hi casablanca, where would I put the array? do you think you can show me how it should look with <script> tags enclosed?
    – muudless
    Feb 7, 2012 at 4:05
  • Or does the setStyles("#961515", "#000000", "italic", "normal"); go into the button's onclick?
    – muudless
    Feb 7, 2012 at 4:08
  • @muudles: See my edit. You just put it into your existing function.
    – casablanca
    Feb 7, 2012 at 4:08
  • Oooooooooooohhh, I like this very much! Thank thee!
    – muudless
    Feb 7, 2012 at 4:16
0

You can make a function to set the appropriate styles, rather than repeating everything four times. Also you can store the values you keep testing in variables:

function setStyles(connectionColor, connectionStyle,
                   locationColor, locationStyle) {
    document.getElementById("connection").style.color = connectionColor;
    document.getElementById("location").style.color = locationColor;
    document.getElementById("connection").style.fontStyle = connectionStyle;
    document.getElementById("location").style.fontStyle = locationStyle;
}

function submitCheck() {
    var connectionVal = formTest.connection.value,
        locationVal = formTest.location.value;

    if (connectionVal.length==0 && locationVal.length==0) {
        setStyle("#961515", "italic", "#961515", "italic");
    } else if (connectionVal.length==0 && locationVal.length!=0) {
        setStyle("#961515", "italic", "#000000", "normal");
    } else if (locationVal.length==0 && !connectionVal.length!=0) {
        setStyle("#000000", "normal", "#961515", "italic");
    } else {
        setStyle("#000000", "normal", "#000000", "normal");
        document.getElementById("flashTest").sendValFromHtml(postcodeVal.value);
    }
}

That doesn't in any way change your logic, it just makes it shorter and easier to read. However, you can optimise the logic somewhat too if you test the connection and location fields separately.

Rather than individually setting colours and italic/normal you'd be better off defining some classes in your CSS stylesheet and just adding/removing those classes as appropriate. Not only does it make your JS simpler and easier to read, it avoids having specific colours embedded in your JS.

0

I prefer a table driven approach that reduces the amount of copied and repeatedly executed code:

function submitCheck() {
    // arrays of values
    //   connection color, location color, connection fontStyle, location fontStyle
    var values = [
        ["#961515", "#961515", "italic", "italic"],
        ["#961515", "#000000", "italic", "normal"],
        ["#000000", "#961515", "normal", "italic"],
        ["#000000", "#000000", "normal", "normal"]
    ];

    var conLength = formTest.connection.value.length;
    var locLength = formTest.location.value.length;
    var conn = document.getElementById("connection");
    var loc = document.getElementById("location");
    var index;

    if (conLength == 0 && locLength == 0) {
        index = 0;
    } else if (conLength == 0 && locLength != 0) {
        index = 1;
    } else if (conLength != 0 && locaLength == 0) {
        index = 2;
    } else {
        index = 3;
        document.getElementById("flashTest").sendValFromHtml(postcodeVal.value);
    }

    var data = values[index];
    conn.style.color = data[0];
    loc.style.color = data[1];
    conn.style.fontStyle = data[2];
    loc.style.fontStyle = data[3];
}

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