88

The radio button does not show up as checked by default. I started off without a default choice doing some very simple js validation and it wasn't working. So I opted to just use default values until I figured that out and discovered that something weird is going on.

The markup is valid and I've tried in FF, Safari and Chrome. Nothing works.

I think it's a conflict with the jQuery library because the problem goes away when I remove the call script.

<label>Do you want to accept American Express?</label> Yes
<input id="amex" style="width: 20px;" type='radio' name='Contact0_AmericanExpress' value='1' /> No
<input style="width: 20px;" type='radio' name='Contact0_AmericanExpress' class='check' value='0' checked="checked" />

2
  • 2
    What exactly is your problem here? I copied your HTML into an empty file, and the "No" button is checked. This is IE8, FF and Opera. Aug 31, 2010 at 7:06
  • see the answer (kind of workaround though) below
    – Manglesh
    Sep 16, 2013 at 8:18

15 Answers 15

107

If you have multiple of the same name with the checked attribute it will take the last checked radio on the page.

<form>
    <label>Do you want to accept American Express?</label>
    Yes<input id="amex" style="width: 20px;" type="radio" name="Contact0_AmericanExpress"  />  
    maybe<input id="amex" style="width: 20px;" type="radio" name="Contact0_AmericanExpress"  checked="checked" />  
    No<input style="width: 20px;" type="radio" name="Contact0_AmericanExpress" class="check" checked="checked" />
</form>

5
  • 6
    It'll actually check the last radio within the <form>. You can have several checked inputs with the same name, as long as they belong to different forms. May 20, 2014 at 16:52
  • This was the issue in my case. The page had two divs, only one of which was displayed at a time. Both had a radio button group with the same name. In my instance, both had the checked attribute, but the browser seemed to be choosing the one from the hidden div (the latter one in the HTML) as the one to use for showing the selected radio button.
    – Phil DD
    Dec 7, 2016 at 18:50
  • 1
    @BrunoLange This was my problem. I was rendering multiple instances of the same HTML on the page - which consisted of two radio buttons not enclosed within a form tag, with one radio button having the checked property. I had to wrap them in a <form> tag for each instance to have the default radio button checked.
    – Matt
    May 22, 2017 at 15:48
  • I needed to have the radio buttons and their uniquely named groups wrapped in their own form tags.
    – kbo4sho88
    Jun 9, 2017 at 18:19
  • 1
    this solved my problem, elements had same name while they are iterated and created dynamically!!! Mar 3, 2018 at 11:30
52

Radio inputs must be inside of a form for 'checked' to work.

10
  • 11
    Putting the input of type radio inside a form (it was div before) solves my problem! I'm curious what's the reason for this? May 15, 2019 at 22:03
  • Same here. I really don't know why a form tag is needed to get the check work reliably... o.o
    – jlang
    Jun 12, 2019 at 14:47
  • I don't think this is necessary but using a form element will allow the naming to be 'scoped' I guess so the checked attribute will work.
    – Harry Theo
    Jul 30, 2019 at 20:03
  • @CharisTheo, It is, in fact, necessary. Try for yourself. Jul 31, 2019 at 5:45
  • 1
    @MichaelSeltenreich I did indeed and I have fixed this problem with changing the name of the radio buttons without including them in a form element
    – Harry Theo
    Jul 31, 2019 at 13:56
39

This might be it:

Is there a bug with radio buttons in jQuery 1.9.1?

In short: Don't use attr() but prop() for checking radio buttons. God I hate JS...

2
  • 8
    This may not have answered the OP's question, but it answered mine Mar 25, 2014 at 23:16
  • just found out the same issue yesterday.
    – CharlesC
    Mar 8, 2016 at 14:14
11

The ultimate JavaScript workaround to this annoying issue -

Simply wrap the jQuery command in a setTimeout. The interval can be extremely small, I use 10 milliseconds and it seems to be working great. The delay is so small that it is virtually undetectable to the end users.

setTimeout(function(){
  $("#radio-element").attr('checked','checked');
},10);

This will also work with

  • $("#radio-element").trigger('click');
  • $("#radio-element").attr('checked',true);
  • $("#radio-element").attr('checked',ANYTHING_THAT_IS_NOT_FALSE);

Hacky...hacky...hacky...hacky... Yes I know... hence this is a workaround....

2
  • It seems that you are setting the attribute 'Checked' on all #radio-elements in your first example.
    – etoxin
    Jan 9, 2013 at 3:58
  • As it is an id selector, there should be only 1 matching element
    – demonkoryu
    Aug 11, 2020 at 11:19
5

Hey I was also facing similar problem, in an ajax generated page.. I took generated source using Webdeveloper pluggin in FF, and checked all the inputs in the form and found out that there was another checkbox inside a hidden div(display:none) with same ID, Once I changed the id of second checkbox, it started working.. You can also try that.. and let me know the result.. cheers

3

Just copied your code into: http://jsfiddle.net/fY4F9/

No is checked by default. Do you have any javascript running that would effect the radio box?

4
  • I know, it's crazy right? No I don't have any scripts going that address radio buttons. Just some validation on text fields and a slider script. I'm going thru it right now just to make sure though..
    – Jordan
    Aug 31, 2010 at 7:19
  • Found the culprit but I don't know exactly what in that script is causing the problem
    – Jordan
    Aug 31, 2010 at 7:29
  • Thanks Ben but it's definitely the script. When disabled I can see the buttons checked by default.
    – Jordan
    Aug 31, 2010 at 7:37
  • Actually I think it's a conflict with the JQuery library
    – Jordan
    Aug 31, 2010 at 7:59
3

The jQuery documentation provides a detailed explanation for checked property vs attribute.

Accordingly, here is another way to retrieve selected radio button value

var accepted = $('input[name="Contact0_AmericanExpress"]:checked').val();
3

I could repro this by setting the name of input tag the same for two groups of input like below:

<body>
  <div>
      <div>
        <h3>Header1</h3>
      </div>
      <div>
          <input type="radio" name="gender" id="male_1" value="male"> Male<br>
          <input type="radio" name="gender" id="female_1" value="female" checked="checked"> Female<br>
          <input type="submit" value="Submit">
      </div>
  </div>


  <div>
      <div>
        <h3>Header2</h3>
      </div>
      <div>
          <input type="radio" name="gender" id="male_2" value="male"> Male<br>
          <input type="radio" name="gender" id="female_2" value="female" checked="checked"> Female<br>
          <input type="submit" value="Submit">
      </div>
  </div>
</body>

(To see this running, click here)

The following two solutions both fix the problem:

  1. Use different names for the inputs in the second group
  2. Use form tag instead of div tag for one of the groups (can't really figure out the real reason why this would solve the problem. Would love to hear some opinions on this!)
1

hi I think if you put id attribute for the second input and give it a unique id value it will work

<label>Do you want to accept American Express?</label>
Yes<input id="amex" style="width: 20px;" type='radio' name='Contact0_AmericanExpress'   value='1'/>  
No<input style="width: 20px;" id="amex0" type='radio' name='Contact0_AmericanExpress' class='check' value='0' checked="checked"/>
1

**Radio button aria-checked: true or false one at a time**

$('input:radio[name=anynameofinput]').change(function() {
            if (this.value === 'value1') {
                $("#id1").attr("aria-checked","true");
                $("#id2").attr("aria-checked","false");
            }
            else if (this.value === 'value2') {;
                $("#id2").attr("aria-checked","true");
                $("#id1").attr("aria-checked","false");
            }
   });

1

also try this way

$('input:radio[name="name"][id="abcd'+no+'"]').attr("checked", "checked");

if there is <form /> tag then ("checked", true) otherwise ("checked", "checked")

0

Your code is right, try to debug your JQuery script to find the issue! If you're using FF you can install an extension to debug JS (and JQuery) it's called FireBug.

-2

You're using non-standard xhtml code (values should be framed with double quotes, not single quotes)

Try this:

<form>
  <label>Do you want to accept American Express?</label>
  Yes<input id="amex" style="width: 20px;" type="radio" name="Contact0_AmericanExpress"  />  
  No<input style="width: 20px;" type="radio" name="Contact0_AmericanExpress" class="check" checked="checked" />
</form>
3
  • thats's up to Jordan's doc type. regardless of that it'll still work in a xhtml doctype; it won't validate however.
    – Ben Rowe
    Aug 31, 2010 at 7:10
  • I changed it just for kicks but I know that isn't the problem. Validation is nice but it won't solve this one.
    – Jordan
    Aug 31, 2010 at 7:16
  • 5
    @CFP Actually, double or single quotes are allowed in standards compliant XHTML (transitional, strict, HTML5, etc). See: dev.w3.org/html5/html-author/#double-quote-attr Nov 18, 2011 at 14:25
-2

just add checked attribute to each radio that you want to have default checked

try this :

<input style="width: 20px;" type="radio" name="Contact0_AmericanExpress" class="check" checked/>
-2

Replace checked="checked" with checked={true}. Or you could even shorten it to just checked.

This is because the expected value type of the checked prop is a boolean. not a string.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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