vote up 2 vote down star

Trying to prepopulate some of my form fields, and am using hook_form_alter(). I've tried a couple of different ways, but in both cases, the fields still come up empty. I'm assuming that I need to set default_value and not value because if the user changes what's in the field, I want that to update correctly. Is that right?

Here's what I've been trying:

function mymodule_form_alter(&$form, &$form_state, $form_id) {

    if($form_id == 'user_profile_form') {

        if(arg(0) == 'user' && arg(1)) {

    		$user = user_load(arg(1));

    		$form['profile_company_site']= array('#default_value' => $user->profile_company_site);
            $form['profile_blog_url']= array('#default_value' => $user->profile_blog_url);
            $form['profile_my_website_url']= array('#default_value' => $user->profile_my_website_url);
            $form['profile_first_name']= array('#default_value' => $user->profile_first_name);
            $form['profile_last_name']= array('#default_value' => $user->profile_last_name);

    	}
    }

}

I also tried it this way:

function mymodule_form_alter(&$form, &$form_state, $form_id) {

    if($form_id == 'user_profile_form') {

        if(arg(0) == 'user' && arg(1)) {

    		$user = user_load(arg(1));

    		$form['profile_company_site'][#default_value'] = $user->profile_company_site);
            $form['profile_blog_url'][#default_value'] = $user->profile_blog_url);
            $form['profile_my_website_url']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_my_website_url);
            $form['profile_first_name']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_first_name);
            $form['profile_last_name']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_last_name);

    	}
    }

}
flag

2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

You are missing one array level. The profile form fields will not be at the top level in the $form array, but in a subarray keyed by the category name. So if you assigned your fields a category of 'example category', your code should look like this:

function mymodule_form_alter(&$form, &$form_state, $form_id) {

    if($form_id == 'user_profile_form') {

        if(arg(0) == 'user' && arg(1)) {

            $user = user_load(arg(1));

            $form['example category']['profile_company_site']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_company_site);
            $form['example category']['profile_blog_url']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_blog_url);
            $form['example category']['profile_my_website_url']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_my_website_url);
            $form['example category']['profile_first_name']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_first_name);
            $form['example category']['profile_last_name']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_last_name);
        }
    }
}

You should use a debugger (or at least a var_dump()) to inspect the form array you want to manipulate - saves a lot of time.

link|flag
FYI the devel module provides a 'pretty' version of var_dump(), in the function dsm(). – threecheeseopera Oct 16 at 19:44
Thanks, that did it! – n00b0101 Oct 16 at 19:51
vote up 2 vote down

Both seem to be in the correct format, but your first one will overwrite all the other items you set for the field. So you are better going off with the second and adding them piece meal.

On the second one, you are missing some single quotes on a couple.

$form['profile_company_site']['#default_value'] = $user->profile_company_site);

Are you sure you are getting into loop?

link|flag
+1 - except for the missing array level, this is correct advice – Henrik Opel Oct 16 at 19:21

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.