Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I have some radio buttons and I'd like to have different hidden divs show up based on which radio button is selected. Here's what the HTML looks like:

<form name="form1" id="my_form" method="post" action="">
    <div><label><input type="radio" name="group1" value="opt1">opt1</label></div>  
    <div><label><input type="radio" name="group1" value="opt2">opt2</label></div>  
    <div><label><input type="radio" name="group1" value="opt3">opt3</label></div>  
    <input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>

....

<style type="text/css">
    .desc { display: none; }
</style>

....

<div id="opt1" class="desc">lorem ipsum dolor</div>
<div id="opt2" class="desc">consectetur adipisicing</div>
<div id="opt3" class="desc">sed do eiusmod tempor</div>

And here's my jQuery:

$(document).ready(function(){ 
    $("input[name$='group2']").click(function() {
        var test = $(this).val();
        $("#"+test).show();
    }); 
});

The reason I'm doing it that way is because my radio buttons and divs are being generated dynamically (the value of the radio button will always have a corresponding div). The code above works partially - the divs will show when the correct button is checked, but I need to add in some code to make the divs hide again once the button is unchecked. Thanks!

share|improve this question

4 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

Just hide them before showing them:

$(document).ready(function(){ 
    $("input[name$='group2']").click(function() {
        var test = $(this).val();
        $("div.desc").hide();
        $("#"+test).show();
    }); 
});
share|improve this answer
thanks, that's exactly what I needed – Manoj Thomas May 5 '10 at 23:14

You should use .change() event handler:

$(document).ready(function(){ 
    $("input[name=group2]").change(function() {
        var test = $(this).val();
        $(".desc").hide();
        $("#"+test).show();
    }); 
});

should work

share|improve this answer

The simple jquery source for the same -

$("input:radio[name='group1']").click(function() {      
    $('.desc').hide();
    $('#' + $("input:radio[name='group1']:checked").val()).show();
});

In order to make it little more appropriate just add checked to first option --

<div><label><input type="radio" name="group1" value="opt1" checked>opt1</label></div>  

remove .desc class from styling and modify divs like --

<div id="opt1" class="desc">lorem ipsum dolor</div>
<div id="opt2" class="desc" style="display: none;">consectetur adipisicing</div>
<div id="opt3" class="desc" style="display: none;">sed do eiusmod tempor</div>

it will really look good any-ways.

share|improve this answer
this helped me, thanks – Jhoon Bey Dec 16 '12 at 9:41
$(document).ready(function(){ 
    $("input[name=group1]").change(function() {
        var test = $(this).val();
        $(".desc").hide();
        $("#"+test).show();
    }); 
});

It's correct input[name=group1] in this example. However, thanks for the code!

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

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