438

I have the following:

$(document).ready(function()
{
    $("#select-all-teammembers").click(function() {
        $("input[name=recipients\\[\\]]").attr('checked', true);
    });                 
});

I'd like the id="select-all-teammembers" when clicked to toggle between checked and unchecked. Ideas? that aren't dozens of lines of code?

24 Answers 24

793

You can write:

$(document).ready(function() {
    $("#select-all-teammembers").click(function() {
        var checkBoxes = $("input[name=recipients\\[\\]]");
        checkBoxes.prop("checked", !checkBoxes.prop("checked"));
    });                 
});

Before jQuery 1.6, when we only had attr() and not prop(), we used to write:

checkBoxes.attr("checked", !checkBoxes.attr("checked"));

But prop() has better semantics than attr() when applied to "boolean" HTML attributes, so it is usually preferred in this situation.

16
  • 5
    This can get tangly as it bases the status off of the first one (so if the user checks the first one, then uses the toggle, they'll get out of sync). Slightly tweaked so it bases the status off of the toggle, not the first checkbox in the list: $("input[name=recipients\[\]]").prop("checked", $(this).prop("checked")); Nov 12, 2012 at 23:24
  • 6
    Using 'prop' makes this work for Zepto, too. Otherwise it will check the box, but will not uncheck it.
    – SimplGy
    Nov 25, 2012 at 22:12
  • 1
    "prop" instead of "attr" did the trick: with "attr" it toggles for a while and then stops, with "prop" instead it toggles as expected. +1 for the update. Nov 7, 2013 at 22:55
  • 14
    $('input[type=checkbox]').trigger('click'); mentioned by @2astalavista below is more succinct and also triggers the "change" event.
    – here
    Aug 27, 2014 at 5:34
  • 1
    could you edit your answer to support @CookiesForDevo's answer Apr 8, 2016 at 14:34
237
//this toggles the checkbox, and fires its event if it has    

$('input[type=checkbox]').trigger('click'); 
//or
$('input[type=checkbox]').click(); 
5
  • Works in chrome 29 but not in FF 17.0.7, can someone confirm that?
    – Gerrit-K
    Oct 1, 2013 at 6:41
  • I had been going the route of changing the property for so long. For me this is a great and more flexible approach for checking and unchecking checkbox elements. Nov 25, 2013 at 17:47
  • 2
    Unwanted event is triggered.
    – Jehong Ahn
    Nov 27, 2019 at 5:37
  • 1
    For checkboxes, it is generally more advisable to fire the 'change' event, as they could be changed by clicking on a label. Jan 15, 2020 at 15:52
  • I like this too, for it's simplicity, but as @PeterLenjo said, you have to adjust things to accommodate for clicking on the label. I just prevented the label from toggling the checkbox altogether.
    – Nathan
    Mar 29, 2022 at 17:10
74

I know this is old but the question was a bit ambiguous in that toggle may mean each checkbox should toggle its state, whatever that is. If you have 3 checked and 2 unchecked, then toggling would make the first 3 unchecked and the last 2 checked.

For that, none of the solutions here work as they make all the checkboxes have the same state, rather than toggle each checkbox's state. Doing $(':checkbox').prop('checked') on many checkboxes returns the logical AND between all .checked binary properties, i.e. if one of them is unchecked, the returned value is false.

You need to use .each() if you want to actually toggle each checkbox state rather than make them all equal, e.g.

   $(':checkbox').each(function () { this.checked = !this.checked; });

Note that you don't need $(this) inside the handler as the .checked property exists in all browsers.

2
  • 6
    Yes, this the correct answer to toggling the state of all checkboxes!
    – Sydwell
    Mar 23, 2013 at 8:26
  • 2
    Orders of magnitude faster than triggering click with jQuery when you have a lot of checkboxes. Feb 1, 2017 at 15:32
16

Here is another way that you want.

$(document).ready(function(){   
    $('#checkp').toggle(
        function () { 
            $('.check').attr('Checked','Checked'); 
        },
        function () { 
            $('.check').removeAttr('Checked'); 
        }
    );
});
1
  • 2
    @kst - This is a better method $('input[name=recipients\[\]]').toggle(this.checked); Forget the classes.
    – Davis
    Jan 14, 2014 at 20:46
13

I think it's simpler to just trigger a click:

$("#select-all-teammembers").click(function() {
    $("input[name=recipients\\[\\]]").trigger('click');
});                 
1
  • So much more effective as it also launches the 'onclick' function of the target chkbox..
    – JonV
    Mar 23, 2022 at 7:38
13

The best way I can think of.

$('#selectAll').change(function () {
    $('.reportCheckbox').prop('checked', this.checked);
});

or

$checkBoxes = $(".checkBoxes");
$("#checkAll").change(function (e) {
    $checkBoxes.prop("checked", this.checked);
});   

or

<input onchange="toggleAll(this)">
function toggleAll(sender) {
    $(".checkBoxes").prop("checked", sender.checked);
}
0
10

Since jQuery 1.6 you can use .prop(function) to toggle the checked state of each found element:

$("input[name=recipients\\[\\]]").prop('checked', function(_, checked) {
    return !checked;
});
3
  • Excellent answer. Do you happen to know more about passing the underscore as the first param? Where could I learn more about that? Sep 9, 2016 at 18:25
  • 1
    Edit: Apparently, it is essentially a means to pass null stackoverflow.com/questions/11406823/… Sep 9, 2016 at 18:27
  • This worked really great - Have been looking for a proptoggle for a while, and this worked clean.
    – Stender
    May 30, 2023 at 8:14
10

Use this plugin :

$.fn.toggleCheck  =function() {
       if(this.tagName === 'INPUT') {
           $(this).prop('checked', !($(this).is(':checked')));
       }

   }

Then

$('#myCheckBox').toggleCheck();
1
  • for me your sollution didn't work until I changed the if-statement like this: if(this[0].tagName === 'INPUT')
    – snecserc
    Jan 21, 2022 at 9:52
2

Assuming that it's an image that has to toggle the checkbox, this works for me

<img src="something.gif" onclick="$('#checkboxid').prop('checked', !($('#checkboxid').is(':checked')));">
<input type="checkbox" id="checkboxid">
1
  • 4
    Since this is your first answer, realize that it is most often best to follow the pattern the poster used in the question - like putting the jQuery code in the document ready handler and not in-line in markup. IF you have a reason to NOT do that, add explaination as to why. May 31, 2012 at 20:12
2

if you want to toggle each box individually (or just one box works just as well):

I recommend using .each() , as it is easy to modify if you want different things to happen, and still relatively short and easy to read.

e.g. :

// toggle all checkboxes, not all at once but toggle each one for its own checked state:
$('input[type="checkbox"]').each(function(){ this.checked = ! this.checked });

// check al even boxes, uncheck all odd boxes:
$('input[type="checkbox"]').each(function(i,cb){ cb.checked = (i%2 == 0); });

// set all to checked = x and only trigger change if it actually changed:
x = true;
$('input[type="checkbox"]').each(function(){
    if(this.checked != x){ this.checked = x; $(this).change();}  
});

on a side note... not sure why everyone uses .attr() or .prop() to (un)check things.

as far as I know, element.checked has always worked the same in all browsers?

2

Check-all checkbox should be updated itself under certain conditions. Try to click on '#select-all-teammembers' then untick few items and click select-all again. You can see inconsistency. To prevent it use the following trick:

  var checkBoxes = $('input[name=recipients\\[\\]]');
  $('#select-all-teammembers').click(function() {
    checkBoxes.prop("checked", !checkBoxes.prop("checked"));
    $(this).prop("checked", checkBoxes.is(':checked'));
  }); 

BTW all checkboxes DOM-object should be cached as described above.

2
<table class="table table-datatable table-bordered table-condensed table-striped table-hover table-responsive">
<thead>
    <tr>
        <th class="col-xs-1"><a class="select_all btn btn-xs btn-info"> Select All </a></th>
        <th class="col-xs-2">#ID</th>
    </tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
    <tr>
        <td><input type="checkbox" name="order333"/></td>
        <td>{{ order.id }}</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td><input type="checkbox" name="order334"/></td>
        <td>{{ order.id }}</td>
    </tr>
</tbody>                  
</table>

Try:

$(".table-datatable .select_all").on('click', function () {
    $("input[name^='order']").prop('checked', function (i, val) {
        return !val;
    });
});
2

The most basic example would be:

// get DOM elements
var checkbox = document.querySelector('input'),
    button = document.querySelector('button');

// bind "cilck" event on the button
button.addEventListener('click', toggleCheckbox);

// when clicking the button, toggle the checkbox
function toggleCheckbox(){
  checkbox.checked = !checkbox.checked;
};
<input type="checkbox">
<button>Toggle checkbox</button>

2

Here is a jQuery way to toggle checkboxes without having to select a checkbox with html5 & labels:

 <div class="checkbox-list margin-auto">
    <label class="">Compare to Last Year</label><br>
    <label class="normal" for="01">
       <input id="01" type="checkbox" name="VIEW" value="01"> Retail units
    </label>
    <label class="normal" for="02">
          <input id="02" type="checkbox" name="VIEW" value="02">  Retail Dollars
    </label>
    <label class="normal" for="03">
          <input id="03" type="checkbox" name="VIEW" value="03">  GP Dollars
    </label>
    <label class="normal" for="04">
          <input id="04" type="checkbox" name="VIEW" value="04">  GP Percent
    </label>
</div>

  $("input[name='VIEW']:checkbox").change(function() {
    if($(this).is(':checked')) {  
         $("input[name='VIEW']:checkbox").prop("checked", false);
     $("input[name='VIEW']:checkbox").parent('.normal').removeClass("checked");
         $(this).prop("checked", true);
         $(this).parent('.normal').addClass('checked');
    }
    else{
         $("input[name='VIEW']").prop("checked", false);
         $("input[name='VIEW']").parent('.normal').removeClass('checked');
    }    
});

http://www.bootply.com/A4h6kAPshx

2

simply you can use this

$("#chkAll").on("click",function(){
    $("input[name=checkBoxName]").prop("checked",$(this).prop("checked"));
});
1
jQuery("#checker").click(function(){
    jQuery("#mydiv :checkbox").each(function(){
        this.checked = true;
    });
});
jQuery("#dechecker").click(function(){
    jQuery("#mydiv :checkbox").each(function(){
        this.checked = false;
    });
});
jQuery("#checktoggler").click(function(){
    jQuery("#mydiv :checkbox").each(function(){
        this.checked = !this.checked;
    });
});

;)

1

You can write like this also

$(function() {
    $("#checkbox-toggle").click(function() {
        $('input[type=checkbox][name=checkbox_id\\[\\]]').click();
    });
});

Just need to call click event of check box when user click on button with id '#checkbox-toggle'.

1

A better approach and UX

$('.checkall').on('click', function() {
   var $checks  = $('checks');
   var $ckall = $(this);

    $.each($checks, function(){
        $(this).prop("checked", $ckall.prop('checked'));
    });
});

$('checks').on('click', function(e){
   $('.checkall').prop('checked', false);
});
1

This one works very well for me.

   $("#checkall").click(function() {
       var fruits = $("input[name=fruits\\[\\]]");
        fruits.prop("checked", $(this).prop("checked"));
    });
1
  • 1
    you do realize you are giving the "checked" property the exact same value it already has, right? isn't it a bit embarrassing? you obviously meant to put a ! sign before it..
    – vsync
    Jul 17, 2016 at 21:32
1

This code will toggle the check box upon clicking any toggle switch animator used in web templates. Replace ".onoffswitch-label" as available in your code. "checkboxID" is the checkbox toggled here.

$('.onoffswitch-label').click(function () {
if ($('#checkboxID').prop('checked')) 
 {
   $('#checkboxID').prop('checked', false);
 }
else 
 {
   $('#checkboxID').prop('checked', true);
 }
});
1

You could also toggle-checkboxes-on-off by doing the following. Currently using bootstrap toggle checkboxes.

<link href='https://gitcdn.github.io/bootstrap-toggle/2.2.2/css/bootstrap-toggle.min.css' rel='stylesheet'>
<script src='https://gitcdn.github.io/bootstrap-toggle/2.2.2/js/bootstrap-toggle.min.js'></script>

<input type='checkbox' id='toggleScheduler' name='toggleScheduler' data-toggle='toggle'  data-on='Enabled'  data-off='Disabled'

$("#toggleScheduler").bootstrapToggle('on'); // enable toggle checkbox
$("#toggleScheduler").bootstrapToggle('off'); // disable toggle checkbox
0

in my guess, the rightest man who suggested normal variant is GigolNet Gigolashvili, but i wanna suggest even more beautiful variant. Check it

$(document).on('click', '.fieldWrapper > label', function(event) {
    event.preventDefault()
    var n = $( event.target ).parent().find('input:checked').length
    var m = $( event.target ).parent().find('input').length
    x = n==m? false:true
    $( event.target ).parent().find('input').each(function (ind, el) {
        // $(el).attr('checked', 'checked');
        this.checked = x
    })
})
0

Setting 'checked' or null instead of true or false respectively will do the work.

// checkbox selection
var $chk=$(':checkbox');
$chk.prop('checked',$chk.is(':checked') ? null:'checked');
-3

Well there is an easier way

First Give your checkboxes a class example 'id_chk'

Then inside the checkbox wich will control 'id_chk' checkboxes state put:

<input type='checkbox' onchange='js:jQuery(".id_chk").prop("checked", jQuery(this).prop("checked"))' />

Thats all, hope this helps

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