Well it depends on when you want the text in the anchor to change, but it's going to involve binding an event handler to the input
element. If you want the a
text to change whenever a key is pressed, you could bind to the keypress
or keyup
event:
$("#medication").keyup(function() {
$("h3 a").text($(this).val());
});
If you want the text to change when the user leaves the input
(in other words, on the blur
event), you can bind to the blur
event:
$("#medication").blur(function() {
$("h3 a").text($(this).val());
});
You may want the text to change when the input
is blurred, but only if the value has changed. If that's the case, bind to the change
event.
You may even want to bind a handler to more than one of these events, in which case you could use bind
, which takes a string representing multiple events:
$("#medication").bind("keyup blur change", function() {
$("h3 a").text($(this).val());
});
The important parts of the above code are the $(this).val()
which will get the value entered into the input
by the user, and the $("h3 a").text(...)
which is what actually changes the text of the anchor.