404

The logic in the change() event handler is not being run when the value is set by val(), but it does run when user selects a value with their mouse. Why is this?

<select id="single">
    <option>Single</option>
    <option>Single2</option>
</select>

<script>
    $(function() {
        $(":input#single").change(function() {
           /* Logic here does not execute when val() is used */
        });
    });

    $("#single").val("Single2");
</script>
0

10 Answers 10

633

Because the change event requires an actual browser event initiated by the user instead of via javascript code.

Do this instead:

$("#single").val("Single2").trigger('change');

or

$("#single").val("Single2").change();
5
  • 1
    Hi, doing this update drop down. but getting called onChange() recursively.
    – Pankaj
    Nov 14, 2014 at 8:51
  • 3
    I dig this answer. It works, but isn't there a better way with jQuery? I'm sure we will ALL remember to do this every time we change a value that has an change handler set up (sarcasm). Frameworks that use data binding might solve this better?
    – Jess
    Oct 8, 2015 at 14:04
  • @user113716 would you know how to tigger it without knowing any values?
    – BenKoshy
    Jul 26, 2016 at 6:41
  • 4
    I agree this is the correct answer but this absolutely sucks and ruins what I am trying to do. Nov 19, 2016 at 13:56
  • Try $("#single").trigger({type: "change", val: "Single2"}) Jun 24, 2019 at 5:41
48

I believe you can manually trigger the change event with trigger():

$("#single").val("Single2").trigger('change');

Though why it doesn't fire automatically, I have no idea.

4
  • I am not able to get working this, also $("#single").val("Single2").change(); I am dynamically creating dropdown and changing its value ( Its working fine for me) But when I am trying to trigger change its not working for me. Sep 19, 2013 at 11:16
  • 5
    A "bit" belated but it doesn't fire automatically because it would lead to infinite loops. Think $('#foo').change(function() { $( this ).val( 'whatever' ); });
    – JJJ
    Jun 28, 2014 at 10:21
  • @Juhana I think an infinite loop is much easier to notice, diagnose and fix than val() mysteriously failing to trigger "change" bindings.
    – iono
    Sep 5, 2016 at 8:27
  • Calling .change() is shorthand for calling .trigger('change').
    – Triynko
    Nov 30, 2016 at 19:42
10

Adding this piece of code after the val() seems to work:

$(":input#single").trigger('change');
1
  • 6
    Yes, but you don't need to do a separate DOM selection for it with $(":input#single"). In fact you really shouldn't. Just chain it after the .val(). You can use .trigger('change') or .change(). They are the exact same.
    – user113716
    Jan 12, 2011 at 18:41
8

As far as I can read in API's. The event is only fired when the user clicks on an option.

http://api.jquery.com/change/

For select boxes, checkboxes, and radio buttons, the event is fired immediately when the user makes a selection with the mouse, but for the other element types the event is deferred until the element loses focus.

2
  • What are the alternatives for the other element types? I want the 'change' event to fire immediately for input elements, not when the element loses focus. Do you know? Apr 11, 2015 at 22:01
  • 1
    If by "immediately" you mean "whenever a key is pressed in the input" you're looking for the onkeyup, onkeypress, and onkeydown events, not onchange. Mar 16, 2016 at 15:51
7

To make it easier, add a custom function and call it whenever you want to change the value and also trigger a change:

$.fn.valAndTrigger = function (element) {
    return $(this).val(element).trigger('change');
}

and

$("#sample").valAndTrigger("NewValue");

Or you can override the val() function to always call the change when val() is called:

(function ($) {
    var originalVal = $.fn.val;
    $.fn.val = function (value) {
        this.trigger("change");
        return originalVal.call(this, value);
    };
})(jQuery);

Sample at http://jsfiddle.net/r60bfkub/

2
  • My browser complains of too much recursion, any fix for this? May 23, 2017 at 15:04
  • You are listening for the change-event over a control and executing a callback that (directly or indirectly) triggers again the change-event over the same control. I suggest you to use another name for the event that you trigger manually (e.g. explicit.change), so that it doesn't re-trigger the change-event, prevents the loop, and still allows you to react to the event. Jan 24, 2018 at 17:31
3

In case you don't want to mix up with default change event you can provide your custom event

$('input.test').on('value_changed', function(e){
    console.log('value changed to '+$(this).val());
});

to trigger the event on value set, you can do

$('input.test').val('I am a new value').trigger('value_changed');
3

If you've just added the select option to a form and you wish to trigger the change event, I've found a setTimeout is required otherwise jQuery doesn't pick up the newly added select box:

window.setTimeout(function() { jQuery('.languagedisplay').change();}, 1);
3

I ran into the same issue while using CMB2 with Wordpress and wanted to hook into the change event of a file upload metabox.

So in case you're not able to modify the code that invokes the change (in this case the CMB2 script), use the code below. The trigger is being invoked AFTER the value is set, otherwise your change eventHandler will work, but the value will be the previous one, not the one being set.

Here's the code i use:

(function ($) {
    var originalVal = $.fn.val;
    $.fn.val = function (value) {
        if (arguments.length >= 1) {
            // setter invoked, do processing
            return originalVal.call(this, value).trigger('change');
        }
        //getter invoked do processing
        return originalVal.call(this);
    };
})(jQuery);
4
  • This is good, but can you show how you would limit it to just one particular input?
    – jwebb
    Jul 20, 2018 at 15:33
  • @jwebb Not quite sure what you mean? We're overriding the jQuery val() function. You bind a change event handler to a specific input. Sep 13, 2018 at 14:07
  • I mean, @user2075039, what if there are multiple inputs on the page using the jQuery val() function and you don't want to bind the custom change event handler to ALL of them but just one of them?
    – jwebb
    Sep 14, 2018 at 3:51
  • @jwebb you can check this.selector inside the overriding $.fn.val function, for a specific selector (will be dependent on what is used for the selector). This is the best i've found for doing this only for specific fields, only problem is you must know what they are using for the selector
    – sMyles
    Oct 22, 2019 at 17:33
1
$(":input#single").trigger('change');

This worked for my script. I have 3 combos & bind with chainSelect event, I need to pass 3 values by url & default select all drop down. I used this

$('#machineMake').val('<?php echo $_GET['headMake']; ?>').trigger('change');

And the first event worked.

1
  • 10
    I hope, you never do this in real world. Needless to say that $_GET['whatever'] cannot be trusted.
    – Denis V
    Sep 13, 2013 at 18:57
0

To change the value

$("#single").val("Single2");

Also to trigger a change event

$("#single").val("Single2").change();

this logic is instrumental when multiple select options are on a page.
one changes and other select options have to change but do not trigger a change event.

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