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Just need some help here

$(document).ready(
          function() {
             $('#submitCart').click(function() {
               var ListItems = $('.theList').text();
               var PriceItems = $('.theList li').attr('data-points');
               var GrandTot = $('.totaler').text();
             $('#message').text(ListItems + PriceItems + GrandTot);
        });
    });

So it works, thanks to another post I recently made, I had everything at .html instead of .text, now my problem is when you click the #submitCart

the list comes out like so

item2item2item2 2000 total = $6000

I want the textarea to read like so

Item2 = 2000
Item2 = 2000
Item2 = 2000
Total = $6000

how would I do this? I tried making a <br> inbetween like so, +<br>+ which did not work

Anyone have a good suggestion?

7
  • Although not related to your question, I recommend you use lower camel case for your variable assignments. Upper camel case vars are commonly used for constructors within the JS community. Dec 1, 2012 at 19:05
  • Why are the items/total put into a textarea as opposed to a read-only element such as a div? Use of a textarea implies that the entries are user editable. Is that the case? This matters as it affects the solution you seek. Dec 1, 2012 at 19:17
  • They are inserted into a div first. This is for a gimmick shopping cart for a forum site. Basically there are items for sale, they click, and it goes into a shopping cart, adding the values of each. Once they are satisfied they click a button, this code comes into place, adding the items + price + total and then that data is sent via a pm to the moderator/admin. Thats why :)
    – EasyBB
    Dec 1, 2012 at 19:20
  • Still doesn't explain to me why a textarea needs to be involved but if you are satisfied that's the right approach, then that's fine. Dec 1, 2012 at 19:29
  • 1
    Aha, keyword "hidden" - makes slightly more sense now. Personally I would still avoid textarea in preference to an set of dynamically created <input type="hidden" name="item[]"> elements. Then jQuery's form.serialize() or some custom serialization, will make most of your other problems disappear. Dec 1, 2012 at 19:33

1 Answer 1

2

You have some work ahead of you .. .attr only gets the attribute of the first matched element, and even if it did return all of them you would have to parse before concatenation. Anyway:

var text = '';
var total = 0;

$(".theList li").each(function () {
   var string = $(this).text();
   var points = parseInt($(this).data('points'));

   //capitalize first letter of string
   text += string.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + string.slice(1)
   //add line break at the end
      + ' = ' + points + "\n";

   total += points;
});

//I think calculating total is easier than trying to manipulate $(".totaler")
text += "Total = $" + total;
$("#message").text(text);
9
  • Yeah, that's the answer.. I thought 'theList' was a textarea based on his post... obviously, it's a ul Dec 1, 2012 at 19:00
  • well the code I have already adds the points for me :) thats why i did it that way in the beginning. And hello again explosion lol. Alright so say that the code I presented above for the addition is already done, so it would work. What would I do for the .attr? I'm trying to study your code so I can learn better. PS, javascript/jQuery newbie (4months)
    – EasyBB
    Dec 1, 2012 at 19:06
  • @user1760670 There is not much you can do since .attr only returns the first result if it selects multiple elements. You have to iterate over it somehow (e.g. using .each like I do in my answer). Dec 1, 2012 at 19:07
  • Yeah, thats why I'm studying your code, how would I implement this to my code? I don't want to just copy and paste, since really there is no learning from that. I see that you added a "/n" which must be the line break for codes. Just trying to understand is all my bad.
    – EasyBB
    Dec 1, 2012 at 19:10
  • That's good that you want to learn. "\n" is the string for line-break. What else do you not understand? Dec 1, 2012 at 19:14

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