If the variables are globals then you can use
var y = window["variable_" + x];
to read or
window["variable_" + x] = y;
to write to them dynamically.
Better practice however is to use an object to store them instead of using separate variables...
var data = { variable_1: null,
variable_2: null };
...
y = data["variable_" + x];
Javascript can also use eval
to access dynamically variables, amazingly enough even local variables
function foo(s) {
var x = 12;
return eval(s);
}
console.log(foo("x"));
and even more amazingly this allows the dynamic creation of new local variables...
var y = 42;
function foo(s) {
var x = 1;
eval(s);
return y; // may be global y or a local y defined by code in s
}
foo("x") // returns 42
foo("var y = 99") // returns 99 (but global y is not changed!)
but these uses of eval
should be considered more a bug than a feature and are best avoided (they also makes the code basically impossible to optimize or understand so "just don't do it"™).
window['variable_' + $(this).val()]
var values = {variable_1='foo', ...}
and access its properties by name$(div).append(values['variable_' + $(this).val()])
eval
to get value of any variable dynamically. like$(div).append(eval("variable_" + $(this).val()))