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Looking for something like:

$("input:radio:checked").previous("name", "original_name").attr("name","new_name");

I tried a few different seen around here but mostly get the error: Object Expected

Any help is appreciated.

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Mind if I ask why you'd like to dynamically change the name of a radio button? – Ben S Jul 13 at 19:26
I have two different actions available for the 1 selected input. – Tommy Jul 13 at 19:27
I fail to see how that requires renaming a radio button. – Ben S Jul 13 at 19:30
The input is being sent to a cgi. I need to distinguish the name of the radio button selected with a different submit, for different functionality, don't want more radio buttons on the UI. – Tommy Jul 13 at 19:33
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Why don't you just check to see if the radio button is checked in the cgi? If was checked, then its name would have changed, you're in the same state. Also, what if your users aren't using javascript? Then your page breaks. – Ben S Jul 13 at 19:38
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2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

As Ben S wrote in the comment to your original question, why do you need to change the name?

Let's say you have

<input type="radio" name="myRadio" id="radioChoice1" value="radioChoice1Value" />
<input type="radio" name="myRadio" id="radioChoice2" value="radioChoice2Value" />

If user selects 'radioChoice1' and clicks submit, browser will send

myRadio=radioChoice1Value to your CGI script. You can process this as you desire.

In case you insist on changing the name attribute, I am not sure what is the 'previous' method in your code.

Can you try,

$("input:radio:checked").attr("name","new_name");

And see if it works?

I can imagine that there could be cross browser problems if you try to change the name attribute. You can create a hidden input and store the name of the radio button selected by the user.

<input type="hidden" id="selectedRadioButton" />

$('#selectedRadioButton').val($("input:radio:checked").attr('name'));

EDIT:

Please post your HTML so that I can tell you what kind of values will be posted to CGI.

For example if you have

<input type="radio" name="transactionType" id="buy" value="buy" />
<input type="radio" name="transactionType" id="sell" value="sell" />

If user clicks on the first radio button 'buy', then in your CGI script value for 'transactionType' will be 'buy'.

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$("input:radio:checked").attr("name","new_name"); object error – Tommy Jul 13 at 19:55
how would the cgi know to execute the buy or sell function with myRadio=radioChoice1Value? What differentiates that? – Tommy Jul 13 at 20:00
That was just an example. Post your HTML so that we can discuss more. Also, I updated my answer with another example. – SolutionYogi Jul 13 at 20:35
vote up 1 vote down

I agree with the others that there is a better solution than to rename the input.

Having said that, and to answer your original question - I suggest that you assign ids to your radio inputs, and then use this code:

$("#inputId").attr("name","new_name");

I don't understand your use of .previous() - I can't find it in the jQuery documentation.

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