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I have a form which among others contains text inputs that contain arithmetic data (prices) The elements and their names are dynamically generated. I would like to only "find" fields that contain arithmetic values based on their names (i.e. an example element name would be price_500_365 (from price_PRODUCTID_ORDERID). So I want to find all text inputs containing "price" in their names or id's using regexp and sum them up. I am not sure how to do it. Any ideas?

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Can you not modify field generation at all? Is the generation performed on the server side? – strager Sep 4 '10 at 11:30
And, are you using any frameworks? I'm assuming "no" because you have added the dhtml tag. – strager Sep 4 '10 at 11:31
Hi, No, its generated server side, and to make it a bit more complex fields are reloaded using ajax whenever a product or a spec changes in the order form, so the field names change as well. Thats why I needed to find all the price_* fields. – Spiros Sep 4 '10 at 11:53
I am using jquery. Still not aware of all it's features though (such as regexp as I just found out) – Spiros Sep 4 '10 at 11:54
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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

You can loop through the form's elements, like this:

var form = document.getElementById("myForm"), sum = 0;
for(var i=0; i<form.elements.length; i++) {
   var e = form.elements[i];
   if(e.type === 'text' && /price/.test(e.name)) sum += parseFloat(e.value);
}
alert(sum);

You can test it here, if you're not dealing with <input> elements strictly though, you may need to change up the if check to include/exclude more elements.

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Thanks, works like a charm! I was unsure of how to check against the names, trying to work with regexp. I was unaware of the test method, learned something new today :o) – Spiros Sep 4 '10 at 11:46
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using jQuery you could do it like this:

$('input[name*="price"]');

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Including jQuery for this is overkill I believe, since it's just a for loop. Finding the elements is trivial, the summation isn't made any easier by jQuery IMO, or much shorter. If the author has other situations improved by jQuery then by all means, but for this question, it's massive overkill. – Nick Craver Sep 4 '10 at 11:37
I do have jquery included in the project indeed. A good explanation for the above suggestion is here also stackoverflow.com/questions/345194/… (I just found it). But I was looking something like the solution below. I marked this answer as useful, but I will have to accept the one below. Thank you guys! – Spiros Sep 4 '10 at 11:46
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