763

According to HTML specs, the select tag in HTML doesn't have a readonly attribute, only a disabled attribute. So if you want to keep the user from changing the dropdown, you have to use disabled.

The only problem is that disabled HTML form inputs don't get included in the POST / GET data.

What's the best way to emulate the readonly attribute for a select tag, and still get the POST data?

11
  • 5
    Don't rely on that for the server side. Anybody can create their own HTML page and make it RW.
    – SineSwiper
    Nov 6, 2012 at 19:43
  • 11
    But it's not a PHP-specific question. Oct 3, 2013 at 23:03
  • 6
    I would suggest not using a select element at all in this case. Is there any reason you can't just display the value as plain text? Sep 4, 2014 at 21:59
  • 2
    @ppumkin your comment makes no sense. I'm not saying there's never a good use case for select or hidden form fields. The OP was having trouble displaying some text on the page, and I was simply wondering what the purpose was of using a select element in this case. Nov 25, 2014 at 18:16
  • 3
    I must be reading the wrong question. He says he wants to disable the select so the user doesn't change it. Maybe he needs to render the page with selects and use jquery to prevent changes. But when he submits it back there is no data for it. I was doing the same. I need to display selects that is filtered by other selects and the last drop down saves to DB via ajax so all the previous must be locked down. When I re render the page, yea, OK- I could display labels instead of selects. But that is not the problem :)
    – Piotr Kula
    Nov 25, 2014 at 19:04

48 Answers 48

551

You should keep the select element disabled but also add another hidden input with the same name and value.

If you reenable your SELECT, you should copy its value to the hidden input in an onchange event and disable (or remove) the hidden input.

Here is a demo:

$('#mainform').submit(function() {
    $('#formdata_container').show();
    $('#formdata').html($(this).serialize());
    return false;
});

$('#enableselect').click(function() {
    $('#mainform input[name=animal]')
        .attr("disabled", true);
    
    $('#animal-select')
        .attr('disabled', false)
    	.attr('name', 'animal');
    
    $('#enableselect').hide();
    return false;
});
#formdata_container {
    padding: 10px;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div>
    <form id="mainform">
        <select id="animal-select" disabled="true">
            <option value="cat" selected>Cat</option>
            <option value="dog">Dog</option>
            <option value="hamster">Hamster</option>
        </select>
        <input type="hidden" name="animal" value="cat"/>
        <button id="enableselect">Enable</button>
        
        <select name="color">
            <option value="blue" selected>Blue</option>
            <option value="green">Green</option>
            <option value="red">Red</option>
        </select>

        <input type="submit"/>
    </form>
</div>

<div id="formdata_container" style="display:none">
    <div>Submitted data:</div>
    <div id="formdata">
    </div>
</div>

19
  • 7
    If you reenable the select you must also then disable or remove the hidden input (after copying it's value as described) of course. Otherwise you'll get the value submitted double
    – Adam
    Mar 12, 2013 at 10:55
  • 1
    @max Ah!. Ok, that works too. I had assumed since yo said that the hidden input should have the "same name" that the select had a name.
    – Adam
    Mar 12, 2013 at 16:19
  • 2
    What if I'm using a multiple select? May 23, 2013 at 19:54
  • 3
    Having two elements with the same names will only post back the last enabled input/selected, not double. Also, only the selected value gets posted back not the entire list. So, your hidden sits before your select and holds the selected value. If the select gets disabled for "readonly", the post back will only contain the value of the hidden input. If the select is enabled, the visible selected option will "over write/replace" the hidden value, and that is the value that will get posted back.
    – Piotr Kula
    Nov 25, 2014 at 14:16
  • 63
    While this is the obvious solution, it sucks as a solution, since you have to add another input field.
    – Donato
    Mar 27, 2015 at 22:12
288

We could also disable all except the selected option.

This way the dropdown still works (and submits its value) but the user can not select another value.

Demo

<select>
    <option disabled>1</option>
    <option selected>2</option>
    <option disabled>3</option>
</select>

8
  • 6
    Nice one for dynamic option's Mar 19, 2015 at 23:29
  • 13
    Perfect for a single-value SELECT tag! But won't work for a <select multiple>, which will still allow users to deselect some of the selected options, thus changing the value. Oct 29, 2015 at 15:28
  • 2
    Browser support for the option tag's disabled attribute
    – Jo.
    Sep 25, 2017 at 20:09
  • 9
    This is a great solution. I'll add that you can achieve it easily with jQuery like this: $("#yourSelectId option:not(:selected)).attr("disabled", "disabled")
    – Onkel-j
    Apr 26, 2019 at 17:45
  • 2
    $('#yourSelectId option:not(:selected)').attr('disabled', 'disabled')
    – Herman Zun
    Jul 14, 2020 at 21:05
131

You can re-enable the select object on submit.

EDIT: i.e., normally disabling the select tag (with the disabled attribute) and then re-enabling it automatically just before submiting the form:

Example with jQuery:

  • To disable it:

    $('#yourSelect').prop('disabled', true);
    
  • To re-enable it before submission so that GET / POST data is included:

    $('#yourForm').on('submit', function() {
        $('#yourSelect').prop('disabled', false);
    });
    

In addition, you could re-enable every disabled input or select:

$('#yourForm').on('submit', function() {
    $('input, select').prop('disabled', false);
});
6
  • 4
    use .prop('disabled',true/false) to set the disabled property. The attribute won't change the actual state.
    – Paris Char
    Jan 30, 2015 at 2:08
  • 1
    I think this solution is clever than @bezmax solution. Because if we adding hidden input, we had to consider that only one of each inputs (same name) was enable in any time. In otherwise, if both inputs was enabled, in server side, program will take array of input that can cause of exception (for example if we didn't handle this situation, and we expect one string and use 'Request.Form[FieldName]' command)
    – M.i.T
    Nov 17, 2015 at 5:36
  • @Kevin, works > 90% cases. Also, you have to have jquery in your belt... Eh.
    – sitilge
    Jan 18, 2016 at 8:14
  • 3
    This is much cleaner the accepted answer. Easier to undo the logic if you don't want the element disabled anymore and no extra input tags.
    – Haohmaru
    Feb 16, 2016 at 13:58
  • 1
    You saved my day! I was looking for a solution similar to this. I always got NullPointerException in my Spring Boot application. Thank you very much! :) Oct 13, 2020 at 11:46
87

another way of doing a readOnly attribute to a select element is by using css

you could do like :

$('#selection').css('pointer-events','none');

DEMO

6
  • 14
    Nice solution. But you can still change the value with keyboard. Oct 9, 2014 at 23:38
  • 2
    Yea this is pretty awesome. To change the value with keyboard you would have to TAB to the element and it becomes selected then. If you make the background colour grey or disabled, you are also visually informing the user this is "disabled" when its actually not disabled. Nobody supports IE any more so who cares. You can also put a keydown prevent default if you want to prevent.
    – Piotr Kula
    Nov 25, 2014 at 14:52
  • Quite unorthodox!! If the select needs to be blocked from page render, ... .on('mouseover', function(){ ... });
    – Fr0zenFyr
    May 14, 2015 at 9:49
  • 5
    pointer-events: none prevents focus from the mouse cursor. To also prevent focus from the keyboard, you can supplement it by blurring immediately upon all focus events: $('select').css('pointer-events', 'none').on('focus', function () {$(this).blur();}); Sep 29, 2018 at 6:14
  • 4
    The way to prevent an element from being focused through keyboard navigation, is to use the tabIndex attribute/property with the value of -1. Apr 12, 2022 at 17:37
47

I know that it is far too late, but it can be done with simple CSS:

select[readonly] option, select[readonly] optgroup {
    display: none;
}

The style hides all the options and the groups when the select is in readonly state, so the user can not change his selection.

No JavaScript hacks are needed.

4
  • Nice and simple. I like it. Sep 8, 2017 at 13:39
  • This is a very nice solution to the problem. Thank you!
    – OderWat
    May 24, 2020 at 20:55
  • 3
    2020 and there is no possibility to add read-only attribute to a dropdown... great workaround!
    – jbra95
    Sep 21, 2020 at 7:25
  • It works like charm. Excelent and elegant! Thanks Mar 24, 2021 at 0:37
44

Simple jQuery solution

Use this if your selects have the readonly class

jQuery('select.readonly option:not(:selected)').attr('disabled',true);

Or this if your selects have the readonly="readonly" attribute

$('select[readonly="readonly"] option:not(:selected)').attr('disabled',true);
10
  • 7
    Please explain your code a bit. Do we have to add a 'readonly' class to the select elements? When do we have to call this code: only in document.ready or every time a select is enabled/disabled? Is your code noscript safe? Jan 9, 2014 at 9:36
  • $(document).ready(function(){$('select option:not(:selected)').attr('disabled',true);}); works just fine on single select. No "readonly" class is required. Multiple select is problematic in that if there is more than one option already selected and so not disabled and a user selects one of the not disabled options, the other previously selected options become unselected.
    – gordon
    Sep 9, 2014 at 14:51
  • don't understand any of this.
    – Piotr Kula
    Nov 25, 2014 at 14:43
  • It disables the options other than the selected one for select boxes with "readonly" class. If you have the select element in hand you can write: $select.find('option').not(':selected').attr('disabled', 'disabled');
    – Semra
    Jan 21, 2015 at 15:13
  • 2
    I like this solution. I would change the selector to select[readonly] so that you just add the readonly attribute to the element - this way you don't have to treat selects differently than any other type. The javascript then progressively enhances the effect. Keep in mind that this solution (and most of the others) only helps the user agent provide the best user experience - it does not actually enforce anything (that must be done server-side if needed).
    – jgivoni
    Jul 8, 2015 at 10:37
42
<select id="countries" onfocus="this.defaultIndex=this.selectedIndex;" onchange="this.selectedIndex=this.defaultIndex;">
<option value="1">Country1</option>
<option value="2">Country2</option>
<option value="3">Country3</option>
<option value="4">Country4</option>
<option value="5">Country5</option>
<option value="6">Country6</option>
<option value="7" selected="selected">Country7</option>
<option value="8">Country8</option>
<option value="9">Country9</option>
</select>

Tested and working in IE 6, 7 & 8b2, Firefox 2 & 3, Opera 9.62, Safari 3.2.1 for Windows and Google Chrome.

10
  • 17
    The problem with this is that the dropdown is rendered as if it weren't readonly. The user will think the thing doesn't work...
    – Lukas Eder
    May 24, 2011 at 7:45
  • 9
    This is confusing for the user because they can still select an option, but when they select it, the list changes back to the previously selected value. It is much more intuitive to disable the list to prevent the user from selecting anything at all.
    – dana
    Jan 25, 2012 at 23:20
  • 11
    I had a similar problem and solved it only displaying the selected option. No JS required, less confusion for the user... <select id="countries"> <option value="7" selected="selected">Country7</option> </select>
    – Potherca
    Jul 5, 2012 at 14:07
  • 1
    @ppumkin @dana @LukasEder No.. not if you can fix this UX. For example, you could do something like onchange = 'this.selectedIndex=this.defaultIndex; alert("You should not change this..");' instead of just changing the selected index silently..
    – Fr0zenFyr
    May 14, 2015 at 9:32
  • 1
    @LukasEder For anyone leery about the respondent experience, they can add some CSS to really emphasize that the drop down should not be changed. Set the cursor to not-allowed and the background-color to #CCC. May 3, 2017 at 13:23
28

Simple CSS solution:

select[readonly]{
    background: #eee;
    cursor:no-drop;
}

select[readonly] option{
    display:none;
}

This results in Select to be gray with nice "disable" cursor on hover
and on select the list of options is "empty" so you can not change its value.

3
  • 1
    If you have a CSRF validation (like in symfony and many other frameworks), it won't work.
    – ThEBiShOp
    Feb 1, 2017 at 17:24
  • 3
    a small improvement: select[readonly] option:not([selected]) {display:none;} That way it will only disable the unselected options, and still submit the selected value in the form. But it's still an awesome answer!
    – Auspex
    Nov 2, 2022 at 14:35
  • 1
    select[readonly]{ cursor:no-drop; user-select: none; pointer-events: none; opacity: 0.7; } select[readonly] option:not([selected]) { display:none; }
    – Kaushal
    Sep 7, 2023 at 9:56
17

[SIMPLEST SOLUTION]

Since the OP specifically asked that he does not want to disable the select element, here is what i use to make a select readonly

In html

<select style="pointer-events: none;" onclick="return false;" onkeydown="return false;" ></select>

THAT's IT

Explanation

  • setting pointer-events to none disables the editing of the "select-element" with mouse/cursor events
  • setting the onclick & onkeydown functions to return false disables the editing of the "select-element" with keyboard

This way you don't have to create any extra element, or disable/re-enable the element with javascript or messing with form-submission logic, or use any third party library.

Plus you can easily add css-styling like setting backgrouns-color to grey or text color to grey to imply that element is readonly. I haven't added that to code, since that is pretty specific to your site-theme

Or if you want to do it via javascript

let isReadOnly = true ;

selectElement.onclick = function () {
    return !isReadOnly ;
};
selectElement.onkeydown =function(){
    return !isReadOnly ;
} ;
selectElement.style.pointerEvents = isReadOnly ? "none" : "all" ;

1
  • 2
    Thanks a lot! Of all the valid solutions, this was (for me) the simplest! Jun 7, 2022 at 17:08
16

Easier still: add the style attribute to your select tag:

style="pointer-events: none;"
2
  • Its work for me but pointer events will make cross browsers support? May 10, 2017 at 10:47
  • 8
    It wont work. User can change the input using keyboard.
    – Sandhu
    Jan 27, 2018 at 11:34
13

Yet another more contemporary option (no pun intended) is to disable all the options of the select element other then the selected one.

note however that this is an HTML 4.0 feature and ie 6,7,8 beta 1 seem to not respect this.

http://www.gtalbot.org/BrowserBugsSection/MSIE7Bugs/OptionDisabledSupport.html

11

This is the best solution I have found:

$("#YourSELECTIdHere option:not(:selected)").prop("disabled", true);

The code above disables all other options not selected while keeping the selected option enabled. Doing so the selected option will make it into the post-back data.

11

A bit late to the party. But this seems to work flawlessly for me

select[readonly] {
    pointer-events:none;
}
5

Set the select disabled when you plan for it to be read-only and then remove the disabled attribute just before submitting the form.

// global variable to store original event/handler for save button
var form_save_button_func = null;

// function to get jQuery object for save button
function get_form_button_by_id(button_id) {
    return jQuery("input[type=button]#"+button_id);
}

// alter value of disabled element
function set_disabled_elem_value(elem_id, value)  {
    jQuery("#"+elem_id).removeAttr("disabled");
    jQuery("#"+elem_id).val(value);
    jQuery("#"+elem_id).attr('disabled','disabled');
}

function set_form_bottom_button_save_custom_code_generic(msg) {
    // save original event/handler that was either declared
    // through javascript or html onclick attribute
    // in a global variable
    form_save_button_func = get_form_button_by_id('BtnSave').prop('onclick'); // jQuery 1.6
    //form_save_button_func = get_form_button_by_id('BtnSave').prop('onclick'); // jQuery 1.7

    // unbind original event/handler (can use any of following statements below)
    get_form_button_by_value('BtnSave').unbind('click');
    get_form_button_by_value('BtnSave').removeAttr('onclick');

    // alternate save code which also calls original event/handler stored in global variable
    get_form_button_by_value('BtnSave').click(function(event){
        event.preventDefault();
        var confirm_result = confirm(msg);
        if (confirm_result) {
            if (jQuery("form.anyForm").find('input[type=text], textarea, select').filter(".disabled-form-elem").length > 0) {
                jQuery("form.anyForm").find('input[type=text], textarea, select').filter(".disabled-form-elem").removeAttr("disabled");
            }

            // disallow further editing of fields once save operation is underway
            // by making them readonly
            // you can also disallow form editing by showing a large transparent
            // div over form such as loading animation with "Saving" message text
            jQuery("form.anyForm").find('input[type=text], textarea, select').attr('ReadOnly','True');

            // now execute original event/handler
            form_save_button_func();
        }
    });
}

$(document).ready(function() {
    // if you want to define save button code in javascript then define it now

    // code below for record update
    set_form_bottom_button_save_custom_code_generic("Do you really want to update this record?");
    // code below for new record
    //set_form_bottom_button_save_custom_code_generic("Do you really want to create this new record?");

    // start disabling elements on form load by also adding a class to identify disabled elements
    jQuery("input[type=text]#phone").addClass('disabled-form-elem').attr('disabled','disabled');
    jQuery("input[type=text]#fax").addClass('disabled-form-elem').attr('disabled','disabled');
    jQuery("select#country").addClass('disabled-form-elem').attr('disabled','disabled');
    jQuery("textarea#address").addClass('disabled-form-elem').attr('disabled','disabled');

    set_disabled_elem_value('phone', '123121231');
    set_disabled_elem_value('fax', '123123123');
    set_disabled_elem_value('country', 'Pakistan');
    set_disabled_elem_value('address', 'address');

}); // end of $(document).ready function
1
  • That sounds like a race condition waiting to happen.
    – SineSwiper
    Nov 6, 2012 at 19:33
5

In addition to disabling the options that should not be selectable i wanted to actually make them dissapear from the list, but still be able to enable them should i need to later:

$("select[readonly]").find("option:not(:selected)").hide().attr("disabled",true);

This finds all select elements with a readonly attribute, then finds all options inside those selects that are not selected, then it hides them and disables them.

It is important to separate the jquery query in 2 for performance reasons, because jquery reads them from right to left, the code:

$("select[readonly] option:not(:selected)")

will first find all unselected options in the document and then filter those that are inside selects with a readonly attribute.

1
  • Maybe .prop("disabled", true) instead
    – sam
    Apr 16, 2014 at 17:20
5

This is the simplest and best solution. You will set a readolny attr on your select, or anyother attr like data-readonly, and do the following

$("select[readonly]").live("focus mousedown mouseup click",function(e){
    e.preventDefault();
    e.stopPropagation();
});
1
  • 1
    you should add keyup ad keydown here as well as the dropdown is still available by "tabbing" into it and use the arrow keys to change the value.
    – xfscrypt
    Feb 18, 2017 at 5:51
5

Solution with tabindex. Works with select but also text inputs.

Simply use a .disabled class.

CSS:

.disabled {
    pointer-events:none; /* No cursor */
    background-color: #eee; /* Gray background */
}

JS:

$(".disabled").attr("tabindex", "-1");

HTML:

<select class="disabled">
    <option value="0">0</option>
</select>

<input type="text" class="disabled" />

Edit: With Internet Explorer, you also need this JS:

$(document).on("mousedown", ".disabled", function (e) {
    e.preventDefault();
});
5

If you disable a form field, this won't be sent when form is submitted. So if you need a readonly that works like disabled but sending values do this :

After any change in readonly properties of an element.

$('select.readonly option:not(:selected)').attr('disabled',true);

$('select:not([readonly]) option').removeAttr('disabled');
4

One simple server-side approach is to remove all the options except the one that you want to be selected. Thus, in Zend Framework 1.12, if $element is a Zend_Form_Element_Select:

 $value =  $element->getValue();
 $options = $element->getAttrib('options');
 $sole_option = array($value => $options[$value]);
 $element->setAttrib('options', $sole_option);
3

input being your <select> element:

input.querySelectorAll(':not([selected])').forEach(option => {
  option.disabled = true
})

This will keep the select in the data (as it's not disabled) and only the option that are not selected are disabled, therefore not selectable. The result is a readable select that cannot be changed (=> read only).

2

Rather than the select itself, you could disable all of the options except for the currently selected option. This gives the appearance of a working drop-down, but only the option you want passed in is a valid selection.

1
  • 3
    In theory a great idea - but there is NO support for disabled options in IE before IE8. tinyurl.com/yle4bto
    – scunliffe
    Oct 14, 2009 at 19:35
2

Following on from Grant Wagners suggestion; here is a jQuery snippet that does it with handler functions instead of direct onXXX attributes:

var readonlySelect = function(selector, makeReadonly) {

    $(selector).filter("select").each(function(i){
        var select = $(this);

        //remove any existing readonly handler
        if(this.readonlyFn) select.unbind("change", this.readonlyFn);
        if(this.readonlyIndex) this.readonlyIndex = null;

        if(makeReadonly) {
            this.readonlyIndex = this.selectedIndex;
            this.readonlyFn = function(){
                this.selectedIndex = this.readonlyIndex;
            };
            select.bind("change", this.readonlyFn);
        }
    });

};
2

What I found works great, with plain javascript (ie: no JQuery library required), is to change the innerHTML of the <select> tag to the desired single remaining value.

Before:

<select name='day' id='day'>
  <option>SUN</option>
  <option>MON</option>
  <option>TUE</option>
  <option>WED</option>
  <option>THU</option>
  <option>FRI</option>
  <option>SAT</option>
</select>

Sample Javascript:

document.getElementById('day').innerHTML = '<option>FRI</option>';

After:

<select name='day' id='day'>
  <option>FRI</option>
</select>

This way, no visiual effect change, and this will POST/GET within the <FORM>.

2

What's the best way to emulate the readonly attribute for a select tag, and still get the POST data?

Just make it an input/text field and add the 'readonly' attribute to it. If the select is effectively 'disabled', then you can't change the value anyway, so you don't need the select tag, and you can simply display the "selected" value as a readonly text input. For most UI purposes I think this should suffice.

1

If the select dropdown is read-only since birth and does not need to change at all, perhaps you should use another control instead? Like a simple <div> (plus hidden form field) or an <input type="text">?

Added: If the dropdown is not read-only all the time and JavaScript is used to enable/disable it, then this is still a solution - just modify the DOM on-the-fly.

3
  • It's not readonly from the beginning. I use JavaScript to change and update. If a previous dropdown has a certain value, this one becomes readonly.
    – Jrgns
    Dec 15, 2008 at 16:07
  • Then perhaps you can replace this dropdown with a textbox on-the-fly?
    – Vilx-
    Dec 15, 2008 at 16:09
  • Yup, but the always there hidden input is more elegant in my opinion
    – Jrgns
    Dec 15, 2008 at 16:23
1

I resolved it with jquery:

      $("select.myselect").bind("focus", function(){
        if($(this).hasClass('readonly'))
        {
          $(this).blur();   
          return;
        }
      });
3
  • This worked very nicely, although the mouseover animation will still show a dropdown arrow that looks clickable.
    – Johncl
    Oct 4, 2011 at 13:18
  • This isn't working for me in Chrome 26: the select is still fully functional.
    – Andy
    May 20, 2013 at 13:52
  • But it still showing up the list when you double click it on IE. Anyway to prevent that? Oct 11, 2013 at 1:41
1

html solution:

<select onfocus="this.blur();">

javascript ones:

selectElement.addEventListener("focus", selectElement.blur, true); selectElement.attachEvent("focus", selectElement.blur); //thanks, IE

to remove:

selectElement.removeEventListener("focus", selectElement.blur, true); selectElement.detachEvent("focus", selectElement.blur); //thanks, IE

edit: added remove methods

2
  • @ButtleButkus do the javascript ones work? i guess it can be a browser related issue.have you tried to add a tabindex to the element
    – Kadmillos
    Apr 9, 2014 at 10:21
  • HTML solution does not work on today's Chrome. :-( Dec 17, 2021 at 11:08
1

In IE I was able to defeat the onfocus=>onblur approach by double-clicking. But remembering the value and then restoring it in the onchange event seems to handle that issue.

<select onfocus="this.oldvalue=this.value;this.blur();" onchange="this.value=this.oldvalue;">
....
</select>

You can do similar without expando properties by using a javascript variable.

1

If you are using jquery validate, you can do the following below, I used the disabled attribute without a problem:

$(function(){
    $('#myform').validate({
        submitHandler:function(form){
            $('select').removeAttr('disabled');
            form.submit();
        }
    });
});
1
<select id="case_reason" name="case_reason" disabled="disabled">

disabled="disabled" ->will get your value from database dan show it in the form. readonly="readonly" ->you can change your value in selectbox, but your value couldn't save in your database.

1
  • wrong, it's saved. Looks like the 'readonly' property isn't processed by all browsers and thus unreliable.
    – richey
    Mar 27, 2016 at 22:58

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