672

I've been working with AngularJS for the last few weeks, and the one thing which is really bothering me is that even after trying all permutations or the configuration defined in the specification at http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.directive:select, I still get an empty option as the first child of select element.

Here's the Jade:

select.span9(ng-model='form.type', required, ng-options='option.value as option.name for option in typeOptions');

Here the controller:

$scope.typeOptions = [
    { name: 'Feature', value: 'feature' },
    { name: 'Bug', value: 'bug' },
    { name: 'Enhancement', value: 'enhancement' }
];

Finally, here's the HTML which gets generated:

<select ng-model="form.type" required="required" ng-options="option.value as option.name for option in typeOptions" class="span9 ng-pristine ng-invalid ng-invalid-required">
    <option value="?" selected="selected"></option>
    <option value="0">Feature</option>
    <option value="1">Bug</option>
    <option value="2">Enhancement</option>
</select>

What do I need to do to get rid of it?

P.S.: Things work without this as well, but it just looks odd if you use select2 without multiple selection.

0

26 Answers 26

656

The empty option is generated when a value referenced by ng-model doesn't exist in a set of options passed to ng-options. This happens to prevent accidental model selection: AngularJS can see that the initial model is either undefined or not in the set of options and don't want to decide model value on its own.

If you want to get rid of the empty option just select an initial value in your controller, something like:

$scope.form.type = $scope.typeOptions[0].value;

Here is the jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/MTfRD/3/

In short: the empty option means that no valid model is selected (by valid I mean: from the set of options). You need to select a valid model value to get rid of this empty option.

14
  • 8
    I tried with both $scope.form.type = ''; and $scope.form.type = $scope.typeOptions[0], however I still se this - <option value="?" selected="selected"></option>
    – Sudhanshu
    Sep 29, 2012 at 17:37
  • 5
    Sometimes it really doesn't make sense to have this data in the JS. If it's the server that made the decision about what was in that select, why should the JS have to duplicate it? Feb 6, 2013 at 1:06
  • 12
    This unfortunately doesn't work if you are using an array and null is one of your values.
    – vpiTriumph
    Sep 26, 2013 at 2:57
  • 6
    Is it possible to add a text inside the empty <option> so tat angular generated something like <option value="?">Select an option</option>
    – RPDeshaies
    Nov 15, 2014 at 18:07
  • 3
    @Tareck117 just wirte <option value="">Select an option</option> thats the null-Value of the optionlist. No need for ?-character.
    – Sebastian
    Jan 30, 2015 at 12:26
241

If you want an initial value, see @pkozlowski.opensource's answer, which FYI can also be implemented in the view (rather than in the controller) using ng-init:

<select ng-model="form.type" required="required" ng-init="form.type='bug'"
  ng-options="option.value as option.name for option in typeOptions" >
</select>

If you don't want an initial value, "a single hard-coded element, with the value set to an empty string, can be nested into the element. This element will then represent null or "not selected" option":

<select ng-model="form.type" required="required"
  ng-options="option.value as option.name for option in typeOptions" >
    <option style="display:none" value="">select a type</option>
</select>
12
124

Angular < 1.4

For anyone out there that treat "null" as valid value for one of the options (so imagine that "null" is a value of one of the items in typeOptions in example below), I found that simplest way to make sure that automatically added option is hidden is to use ng-if.

<select ng-options="option.value as option.name for option in typeOptions">
    <option value="" ng-if="false"></option>
</select>

Why ng-if and not ng-hide? Because you want css selectors that would target first option inside above select to target "real" option, not the one that's hidden. It gets useful when you're using protractor for e2e testing and (for whatever reason) you use by.css() to target select options.

Angular >= 1.4

Due to the refactoring of the select and options directives, using ng-if is no longer a viable option so you gotta turn to ng-show="false" to make it work again.

7
  • 5
    Should be the accepted answer, because this is the correct visual behavior for the select. You put size="5" to the selects attributes and you can see that there is nothing selected! Like in a default <select>-Element! I can't understand why angular is doing such thing for selects without multiple attribute...
    – Sebastian
    Jan 30, 2015 at 12:24
  • 1
    Yes i agree, this should be the accepted answer. This is the 'angular-way'. ng-if actually removes the options element from the dom (when false) so this solution also works on all browsers without 'hacky' coding (contrary to ng-hide or ng-show).
    – Sander_P
    Mar 9, 2015 at 13:59
  • 2
    @Sander_P by definition this solution is "hacky" coding in my opinion (putting something in the dom to trick angular into taking it out), but you're right it still is the "best" solution. The "even better" solution would be to allow for a friggin select that has no value! What the heck? Its not like this is an edge scenario.
    – dudewad
    Jul 24, 2015 at 18:31
  • @dudewad: things might work better with Angular 1.4. From the AngularJS blog for 1.4.0: "ngOptions was completely refactored to allow a number of annoying bugs to be fixed,"
    – Sander_P
    Jul 27, 2015 at 7:05
  • 1
    Haha "annoying bugs". Okay. Well I'm still a little skiddish when it comes to upgrading 3 days before delivery so I'll keep with your solution for now, which seems to be working swimmingly. Noted for the future, though :) Thanks!
    – dudewad
    Jul 27, 2015 at 16:39
36

Maybe useful for someone:

If you want to use plain options instead of ng-options, you could do like below:

<select ng-model="sortorder" ng-init="sortorder='publish_date'">
  <option value="publish_date">Ascending</option>
  <option value="-publish_date">Descending</option>
</select>

Set the model inline. Use ng-init to get rid of empty option

3
  • I haven't been able to find a clear example of setting up ng-options with OBJECTS rather than JSON arrays and when I try to "translate" between the two, not only does it not come out right but it fails "silently" so I haven't a clue what I'm doing wrong. I finally opted for plain ng-repeat in an option tag. I know it's not best practice but at least it WORKS. If anyone can point me to a straightforward, easily swappable on the details, angular-n00b-friendly WORKING example using ng-options with data objects (NOT JSON), I'd be elated. Double elated if it uses ng-init as well.
    – code-sushi
    Aug 23, 2014 at 0:14
  • I am using plain options, but in the controller i dont seem to get the value of selected dropdown. Ex:I tried alert($scope.sortorder.value); and alert($scope.sortorder); both gives undefined. How to get the selected value here? Jul 24, 2015 at 18:54
  • Thank you so much for this. I was about to write a completely useless object in the controller that I didn't need I just needed a simple select.. Thank you once again. Jan 18, 2017 at 10:36
26

Something similar was happening to me too and was caused by an upgrade to angular 1.5.ng-init seems to be being parsed for type in newer versions of Angular. In older Angular ng-init="myModelName=600" would map to an option with value "600" i.e. <option value="600">First</option> but in Angular 1.5 it won't find this as it seems to be expecting to find an option with value 600 i.e <option value=600>First</option>. Angular would then insert a random first item:

<option value="? number:600 ?"></option>

Angular < 1.2.x

<select ng-model="myModelName" ng-init="myModelName=600">
  <option value="600">First</option>
  <option value="700">Second</option>
</select>

Angular > 1.2

<select ng-model="myModelName" ng-init="myModelName='600'">
  <option value="600">First</option>
  <option value="700">Second</option>
</select>
4
  • 2
    Thanks! In my case I can't use ng-init (no default value) so I casted my model to a string and it worked! Aug 3, 2016 at 15:06
  • Very useful to my application production issue. Thanks @Nabil Boag Feb 3, 2017 at 6:49
  • 3
    This works, sure, but the better options is to use ng-value="600" in the option instead of value. It will parse it to an number and you dont have to convert your values like you do now :)
    – Max
    May 29, 2018 at 8:52
  • @Max I tried a lot of high value answers but none worked until I found yours. Thank you.
    – Andrew
    Oct 29, 2019 at 17:01
23

Among the multitudes of answers here, I figured I'd repost the solution that worked for me and met all of the following conditions:

  • provided a placeholder/prompt when the ng-model is falsy (e.g. "--select region--" w. value="")
  • when ng-model value is falsy and user opens the options dropdown, the placeholder is selected (other solutions mentioned here make the first option appear selected which can be misleading)
  • allow the user to deselect a valid value, essentially selecting the falsy/default value again

enter image description here

code

<select name="market_vertical" ng-model="vc.viewData.market_vertical"
    ng-options="opt as (opt | capitalizeFirst) for opt in vc.adminData.regions">

    <option ng-selected="true" value="">select a market vertical</option>
</select>

src

original q&a - https://stackoverflow.com/a/32880941/1121919

2
  • Do you mean if the default is <option ng-selected="true" value="null">?
    – jusopi
    Mar 17, 2017 at 19:29
  • I mean if ng-model value is setted as null, angular creates and empty option on the select
    – Flezcano
    Mar 18, 2017 at 5:54
18

A quick solution:

select option:empty { display:none }

Hope it helps someone. Ideally, the selected answer should be the approach but if in case that's not possible then should work as a patch.

4
  • 2
    Per my testing this will only work in Chrome (new Chrome, on top of that) and Firefox. IE and Safari break. Don't know about opera and other edge browsers. Either way, this is not a good solution, unfortunately.
    – dudewad
    Jul 24, 2015 at 18:28
  • where should we place that in html before the close of <select> or else in the js
    – H Varma
    Dec 11, 2016 at 18:38
  • 1
    @HVarma It's a CSS rule. Place it in the stylesheet or inside <style> tag
    – K K
    Dec 12, 2016 at 3:25
  • @KK stackoverflow.com/questions/48355599/… Can you please check this? Jan 24, 2018 at 9:46
14

Yes ng-model will create empty option value, when ng-model property undefined. We can avoid this, if we assign object to ng-model

Example

angular coding

$scope.collections = [
    { name: 'Feature', value: 'feature' }, 
    { name: 'Bug', value: 'bug' }, 
    { name: 'Enhancement', value: 'enhancement'}
];

$scope.selectedOption = $scope.collections[0];


<select class='form-control' data-ng-model='selectedOption' data-ng-options='item as item.name for item in collections'></select>

Important Note:

Assign object of array like $scope.collections[0] or $scope.collections[1] to ng-model, dont use object properties. if you are getting select option value from server, using call back function, assign object to ng-model

NOTE from Angular document

Note: ngModel compares by reference, not value. This is important when binding to an array of objects. see an example http://jsfiddle.net/qWzTb/

i have tried lot of times finally i found it.

9

Though both @pkozlowski.opensource's and @Mark's answers are correct, I'd like to share my slightly modified version where I always select the first item in the list, regardless of its value:

<select ng-options="option.value as option.name for option in typeOptions" ng-init="form.type=typeOptions[0].value">
</select>
4

I'm using Angular 1.4x and I found this example, so I used ng-init to set the initial value in the select:

<select ng-init="foo = foo || items[0]" ng-model="foo" ng-options="item as item.id for item in items"></select>
3


I faced the same issue. If you are posting an angular form with normal post then you will face this issue, as angular don't allow you to set values for the options in the way you have used. If you get the value of "form.type" then you will find the right value. You have to post the angular object it self not the form post.

3

A simple solution is to set an option with a blank value "" I found this eliminates the extra undefined option.

1
  • 5
    Doenst work @ 1.4.3, It just adds 2 empty options to the form Oct 6, 2015 at 13:58
3

Ok, actually the answer is way simple: when there is a option not recognized by Angular, it includes a dull one. What you are doing wrong is, when you use ng-options, it reads an object, say [{ id: 10, name: test }, { id: 11, name: test2 }] right?

This is what your model value needs to be to evaluate it as equal, say you want selected value to be 10, you need to set your model to a value like { id: 10, name: test } to select 10, therefore it will NOT create that trash.

Hope it helps everybody to understand, I had a rough time trying :)

2

This solution works for me:

<select ng-model="mymodel">    
   <option ng-value="''" style="display:none;" selected>Country</option>
   <option value="US">USA</option>
</select>
3
  • Downvote could be because applying CSS to option elements doesn't work across all browsers.
    – Kafoso
    Oct 5, 2018 at 11:03
  • I just tested it on Chrome, FireFox, Safari and Edge - everything is working.
    – MMM
    Oct 10, 2018 at 10:32
  • @MMM "all browsers" includes IE. A lot of users are still stuck with IE 10 and 11, and that's likely why the downvote happened. Chrome, fF, Saf, and Edge aren't "all browsers".
    – PKD
    Apr 24, 2020 at 15:49
1

This worked for me

<select ng-init="basicProfile.casteId" ng-model="basicProfile.casteId" class="form-control">
     <option value="0">Select Caste....</option>
     <option data-ng-repeat="option in formCastes" value="{{option.id}}">{{option.casteName}}</option>
 </select>
1
  • Just adds the option into the list and leaves the empty space, sadly.
    – AMontpetit
    Dec 15, 2016 at 14:58
1

This works perfectly fine

<select ng-model="contact.Title" ng-options="co for co in['Mr.','Ms.','Mrs.','Dr.','Prof.']">
    <option style="display:none" value=""></option>
</select>

the way it works is, that this gives the first option to be displayed before selecting something and the display:none removes it form the dropdown so if you want you can do

<select ng-model="contact.Title" ng-options="co for co in['Mr.','Ms.','Mrs.','Dr.','Prof.']">
    <option style="display:none" value="">select an option...</option>
</select>

and this will give you the select and option before selecting but once selected it will disappear, and it will not show up in the dropdown.

1
  • Actually you don't answer the question itself, worst than that, you are just hiding the element.
    – Marco
    Sep 26, 2016 at 18:47
0

Try this one in your controller, in the same order:

$scope.typeOptions = [
    { name: 'Feature', value: 'feature' }, 
    { name: 'Bug', value: 'bug' }, 
    { name: 'Enhancement', value: 'enhancement' }
];
$scope.form.type = $scope.typeOptions[0];
1
  • I tried your method but unfortunately I couldn't get it to work. Can you take a look at this fiddle. jsfiddle.net/5PdaX Jun 27, 2014 at 6:20
0

Here is the fix :

for a sample data like :

financeRef.pageCount = [{listCount:10,listName:modelStrings.COMMON_TEN_PAGE},    
{listCount:25,listName:modelStrings.COMMON_TWENTYFIVE_PAGE},
{listCount:50,listName:modelStrings.COMMON_FIFTY_PAGE}];

The select option should be like this:-

<select ng-model="financeRef.financeLimit" ng-change="financeRef.updateRecords(1)" 
class="perPageCount" ng-show="financeRef.showTable" ng-init="financeRef.financeLimit=10"
ng-options="value.listCount as value.listName for  value in financeRef.pageCount"
></select>

The point being when we write value.listCount as value.listName, it automatically populates the text in value.listName but the value of the selected option is value.listCount although the values my show normal 0,1,2 .. and so on !!!

In my case, the financeRef.financeLimit is actually grabbing the value.listCount and I can do my manipulation in the controller dynamically.

0

I would like to add that if the initial value comes from a binding from some parent element or 1.5 component, make sure that the proper type is passed. If using @ in binding, the variable passed will be string and if the options are eg. integers then the empty option will show up.

Either parse properly the value in init, or binding with < and not @ (less recommended for performance unless necessary).

0

Simple solution

<select ng-model='form.type' required><options>
<option ng-repeat="tp in typeOptions" ng-selected="    
{{form.type==tp.value?true:false}}" value="{{tp.value}}">{{tp.name}}</option>

0

A grind solution with jQuery when you haven't the control of the options

html:

<select id="selector" ng-select="selector" data-ng-init=init() >
...
</select>

js:

$scope.init = function () {
    jQuery('#selector option:first').remove();
    $scope.selector=jQuery('#selector option:first').val();
}
2
  • Pascal, someone downvoted you because this is a jQuery solution, not AngularJs Jun 18, 2017 at 10:59
  • The question is asked to dig out the more of Angular... :-/ Jul 16, 2017 at 15:32
0

If you use ng-init your model to solve this problem:

<select ng-model="foo" ng-app ng-init="foo='2'">
0

i had the same problem, i (removed "ng-model") changed this :

<select ng-model="mapayear" id="mapayear" name="mapayear" style="  display:inline-block !important;  max-width: 20%;" class="form-control">
  <option id="removable" hidden> Selecione u </option>
    <option selected ng-repeat="x in anos" value="{{ x.ano }}">{{ x.ano }}
</option>
</select>

to this:

<select id="mapayear" name="mapayear" style="  display:inline-block !important;  max-width: 20%;" class="form-control">
  <option id="removable" hidden> Selecione u </option>
    <option selected ng-repeat="x in anos" value="{{ x.ano }}">{{ x.ano }}
</option>
</select>

now its working, but in my case it was cause ive deleted that scope from ng.controller, check if u didn't do the same.

0

The only thing worked for me is using track by in ng-options, like this:

 <select class="dropdown" ng-model="selectedUserTable" ng-options="option.Id as option.Name for option in userTables track by option.Id">

1
  • if I use this ng-option get last value of array which I want to set value of option of select. It did not solved :(
    – rufatZZ
    Dec 22, 2017 at 13:26
0

Refer the example from angularjs documentation how to overcome these issues.

  1. Go to this documentation link here
  2. Find 'Binding select to a non-string value via ngModel parsing / formatting'
  3. There u can see there, directive called 'convertToNumber' solve the issue.

It works for me. Can also see how it works here

0

We can use CSS to hide the first option , But it wont work in IE 10, 11. The best way is to remove the element using Jquery. This solution works for major browser tested in chrome and IE10 ,11

Also if you are using angular , sometime using setTimeout works

$scope.RemoveFirstOptionElement = function (element) {
    setTimeout(function () {
        $(element.children()[0]).remove();
    }, 0);
};

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