70

I've used a hover function where you do x on mouseover and y and mouseout. I'm trying the same for click but it doesn't seem to work:

$('.offer').click(function(){ 
  $(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', true ); 
},function(){
  $(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', false ); 
});

I want the checkbox to be checked when clicking on a div, and unchecked if clicked again - a click toggle.

1

15 Answers 15

214

This is easily done by flipping the current 'checked' state of the checkbox upon each click. Examples:

 $(".offer").on("click", function () { 
       var $checkbox = $(this).find(':checkbox');
       $checkbox.attr('checked', !$checkbox.attr('checked'));
 });

or:

 $(".offer").on("click", function () { 
       var $checkbox = $(this).find(':checkbox');
       $checkbox.attr('checked', !$checkbox.is(':checked'));
 });

or, by directly manipulating the DOM 'checked' property (i.e. not using attr() to fetch the current state of the clicked checkbox):

 $(".offer").on("click", function () { 
       var $checkbox = $(this).find(':checkbox');
       $checkbox.attr('checked', !$checkbox[0].checked);
 });

...and so on.

Note: since jQuery 1.6, checkboxes should be set using prop not attr:

 $(".offer").on("click", function () { 
       var $checkbox = $(this).find(':checkbox');
       $checkbox.prop('checked', !$checkbox[0].checked);
 });
6
  • I wouldn't recommend setting an element's DOM attribute to a boolean value. Presumably it gets cast to the string '1' in the process. Sep 23, 2009 at 17:23
  • 2
    @Alex Barrett - shouldn't matter, jQuery sweeps such details under the rug. I believe it's common practice to set boolean attributes like selected, disabled and checked to a boolean value using attr(). Furthermore, their internal representation is boolean, alert($foo.attr('checked')) will return true or false whether or not a string or a boolean has been used to set it.
    – karim79
    Sep 23, 2009 at 17:45
  • 8
    I've encountered cases where you actually need to remove the "checked" attribute completely in order for the box to be unchecked. In those circumstances, none of these will work. Aug 22, 2011 at 12:36
  • @Jeremy - can you provide a working example? Sounds like a bizarre edge case.
    – karim79
    Aug 22, 2011 at 14:15
  • 1
    Why invert the attribute in such a complex way, when you can just click on each checkbox: ... $(this).find(':checkbox').click(); ...
    – vladko13
    Dec 9, 2015 at 17:36
27

Another approach would be to extended jquery like this:

$.fn.toggleCheckbox = function() {
    this.attr('checked', !this.attr('checked'));
}

Then call:

$('.offer').find(':checkbox').toggleCheckbox();
2
  • 2
    I like that, as it works for trainloads of checkboxes, too. +1
    – Tino
    Feb 25, 2011 at 16:42
  • You should add this.trigger('change'); otherwise the onChange Event wont be triggered. Jul 20, 2015 at 1:16
11

Warning: using attr() or prop() to change the state of a checkbox does not fire the change event in most browsers I've tested with. The checked state will change but no event bubbling. You must trigger the change event manually after setting the checked attribute. I had some other event handlers monitoring the state of checkboxes and they would work fine with direct user clicks. However, setting the checked state programmatically fails to consistently trigger the change event.

jQuery 1.6

$('.offer').bind('click', function(){ 
    var $checkbox = $(this).find(':checkbox');
    $checkbox[0].checked = !$checkbox[0].checked;
    $checkbox.trigger('change'); //<- Works in IE6 - IE9, Chrome, Firefox
});
1
  • 1
    you could also trigger the click event directly.
    – davenpcj
    Feb 23, 2012 at 15:48
7

You could use the toggle function:

$('.offer').toggle(function() {
    $(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', true);
}, function() {
    $(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', false);
});
1
  • This has been deprecated.
    – Mani
    Sep 19, 2013 at 20:25
2

Why not in one line?

$('.offer').click(function(){
    $(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', !$(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked'));
});
1

I have a single checkbox named chkDueDate and an HTML object with a click event as follows:

$('#chkDueDate').attr('checked', !$('#chkDueDate').is(':checked'));

Clicking the HTML object (in this case a <span>) toggles the checked property of the checkbox.

1

jQuery: Best Way, delegate the actions to jQuery (jQuery = jQuery).

$( "input[type='checkbox']" ).prop( "checked", function( i, val ) {
    return !val;
});
0

try changing this:

$(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', true ); 

to this:

$(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', 'checked'); 

Not 100% sure if that will do it, but I seem to recall having a similar problem. Good luck!

0
$('.offer').click(function(){ 
    if ($(this).find(':checkbox').is(':checked'))
    {
        $(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', false); 
    }else{
        $(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked', true); 
    }
});
0

In JQuery I don't think that click() accepts two functions for toggling. You should use the toggle() function for that: http://docs.jquery.com/Events/toggle

0
$('.offer').click(function() { 
    $(':checkbox', this).each(function() {
        this.checked = !this.checked;
    });
});
0

Easiest solution

$('.offer').click(function(){
    var cc = $(this).attr('checked') == undefined  ? false : true;
    $(this).find(':checkbox').attr('checked',cc);
});
1
  • Close. It will be 'undefined' on the first click, assigning the value 'false'. Then it will be defined on the second click, assigning the value 'true'. On a third click, it will still be defined, so it will still be assigned 'true'.
    – Kevin C.
    Oct 18, 2012 at 0:13
0
<label>
    <input
        type="checkbox"
        onclick="$('input[type=checkbox]').attr('checked', $(this).is(':checked'));"
    />
    Check all
</label>
0

Another alternative solution to toggle checkbox value:

<div id="parent">
    <img src="" class="avatar" />
    <input type="checkbox" name="" />
</div>


$("img.avatar").click(function(){

    var op = !$(this).parent().find(':checkbox').attr('checked');
    $(this).parent().find(':checkbox').attr('checked', op);

});
0
    $('controlCheckBox').click(function(){
    var temp = $(this).prop('checked');
    $('controlledCheckBoxes').prop('checked', temp);
});

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