1248

I am working on a search with JavaScript. I would use a form, but it messes up something else on my page. I have this input text field:

<input name="searchTxt" type="text" maxlength="512" id="searchTxt" class="searchField"/>

And this is my JavaScript code:

<script type="text/javascript">
  function searchURL(){
    window.location = "http://www.myurl.com/search/" + (input text value);
  }
</script>

How do I get the value from the text field into JavaScript?

0

16 Answers 16

2382

There are various methods to get an input textbox value directly (without wrapping the input element inside a form element):

Method 1

document.getElementById('textbox_id').value to get the value of desired box

For example

document.getElementById("searchTxt").value;

  Note: Method 2,3,4 and 6 returns a collection of elements, so use [whole_number] to get the desired occurrence. For the first element, use [0], for the second one use [1], and so on...

Method 2

Use document.getElementsByClassName('class_name')[whole_number].value which returns a Live HTMLCollection

For example

document.getElementsByClassName("searchField")[0].value; if this is the first textbox in your page.

Method 3

Use document.getElementsByTagName('tag_name')[whole_number].value which also returns a live HTMLCollection

For example

document.getElementsByTagName("input")[0].value;, if this is the first textbox in your page.

Method 4

document.getElementsByName('name')[whole_number].value which also >returns a live NodeList

For example

document.getElementsByName("searchTxt")[0].value; if this is the first textbox with name 'searchtext' in your page.

Method 5

Use the powerful document.querySelector('selector').value which uses a CSS selector to select the element

For example

  • document.querySelector('#searchTxt').value; selected by id
  • document.querySelector('.searchField').value; selected by class
  • document.querySelector('input').value; selected by tagname
  • document.querySelector('[name="searchTxt"]').value; selected by name

Method 6

document.querySelectorAll('selector')[whole_number].value which also uses a CSS selector to select elements, but it returns all elements with that selector as a static Nodelist.

For example

  • document.querySelectorAll('#searchTxt')[0].value; selected by id
  • document.querySelectorAll('.searchField')[0].value; selected by class
  • document.querySelectorAll('input')[0].value; selected by tagname
  • document.querySelectorAll('[name="searchTxt"]')[0].value; selected by name

Support

Browser Method1 Method2 Method3 Method4 Method5/6
IE6 Y(Buggy) N Y Y(Buggy) N
IE7 Y(Buggy) N Y Y(Buggy) N
IE8 Y N Y Y(Buggy) Y
IE9 Y Y Y Y(Buggy) Y
IE10 Y Y Y Y Y
FF3.0 Y Y Y Y N
FF3.5/FF3.6 Y Y Y Y Y
FF4b1 Y Y Y Y Y
GC4/GC5 Y Y Y Y Y Y=YES,N=NO
Safari4/Safari5 Y Y Y Y Y
Opera10.10/
Opera10.53/ Y Y Y Y(Buggy) Y
Opera10.60
Opera 12 Y Y Y Y Y

Key:

IE=Internet Explorer

FF=Mozilla Firefox

GC=Google Chrome

Useful links

  1. To see the support of these methods with all the bugs including more details click here
  2. Difference Between Static collections and Live collections click Here
  3. Difference Between NodeList and HTMLCollection click Here
16
  • IE8 supports QSA as far as I can see, it just doesn't support CSS3 selectors in the selector string. Jun 22, 2013 at 4:02
  • @FabrícioMatté i just checked here quirksmode.org/dom/tests/basics.html#querySelectorAll and it told me that it doesnot Jun 22, 2013 at 4:10
  • 1
    @GKislin Ah! I see. Nice that I didn't know about it. But after reading this, I am feeling reluctant to add this edit to the answer right now. Maybe someday later, I will add it with a warning to avoid it. One of all reasons for warning would be this. If you feel like it is really nice, then either make an edit with a warning or add another answer upon your wish :) Apr 26, 2017 at 14:05
  • 1
    @calyxofheld Either use forEach or for loop over all of them. It is very basic thing in JS. Have you gone through JS briefly, if not? then I will recommend you to go through that first. Keep learning Aug 28, 2021 at 7:36
  • 1
    @GuidoG There is some bug in your come most likely Nov 19, 2022 at 10:48
45
//creates a listener for when you press a key
window.onkeyup = keyup;

//creates a global Javascript variable
var inputTextValue;

function keyup(e) {
  //setting your input text to the global Javascript Variable for every key press
  inputTextValue = e.target.value;

  //listens for you to press the ENTER key, at which point your web address will change to the one you have input in the search box
  if (e.keyCode == 13) {
    window.location = "http://www.myurl.com/search/" + inputTextValue;
  }
}

See this functioning in codepen.

1
  • While I appreciate the completeness of the accepted answer, I found this answer to be of use re: accessing, in JS code, a value entered in a DOM text input element (text box). For detail, see my answer, elsewhere in this Question. Apr 5, 2017 at 23:51
35

I would create a variable to store the input like this:

var input = document.getElementById("input_id").value;

And then I would just use the variable to add the input value to the string.

= "Your string" + input;

1
  • If you want it to be a proper javascript object so that you can programmatically access each property, just do: var input = JSON.parse(document.getElementById("input_id").value);
    – JakeJ
    Jul 16, 2019 at 13:33
24

You should be able to type:

var input = document.getElementById("searchTxt");

function searchURL() {
     window.location = "http://www.myurl.com/search/" + input.value;
}
<input name="searchTxt" type="text" maxlength="512" id="searchTxt" class="searchField"/>

I'm sure there are better ways to do this, but this one seems to work across all browsers, and it requires minimal understanding of JavaScript to make, improve, and edit.

18

Also you can, call by tags names, like this: form_name.input_name.value; So you will have the specific value of determined input in a specific form.

1
12

Short

You can read value by searchTxt.value

<input name="searchTxt" type="text" maxlength="512" id="searchTxt" class="searchField"/>

<script type="text/javascript">
  function searchURL(){
    console.log(searchTxt.value);
    // window.location = "http://www.myurl.com/search/" + searchTxt.value;
  }
</script>





<!-- SHORT ugly test code -->
<button class="search" onclick="searchURL()">Search</button>

3
  • The edit is fine; commentary on downvotes doesn't belong in posts. Please refrain from rolling back when the post unlocks
    – Zoe is on strike
    Nov 28, 2021 at 16:46
  • @Kamil - do you know what this short form method is called for getting the data, or do you have some reference to a DOC that exsplains what this is - i've just enouctered this in some code and it had me pooring over the code base for a querySelector somewhere. - this is great as a feature, just so different to the "normal" way of JS interacting with code. Thanks
    – Wally
    Sep 8, 2022 at 15:36
  • @Wally It's not great. This thing in discussed in comments of few other answers here. stackoverflow.com/questions/3434278/… Why it is not great: jsfiddle.net/p94ygswy/4 Sep 19, 2022 at 14:41
9

If your input is in a form and you want to get the value after submit you can do like:

<form onsubmit="submitLoginForm(event)">
    <input type="text" name="name">
    <input type="password" name="password">
    <input type="submit" value="Login">
</form>

<script type="text/javascript">

    function submitLoginForm(event){
        event.preventDefault();

        console.log(event.target['name'].value);
        console.log(event.target['password'].value);
    }
</script>

Benefit of this way: Example your page have 2 form for input sender and receiver information.

If you don't use form for get value then

  • You can set two different id (or tag or name ...) for each field like sender-name and receiver-name, sender-address and receiver-address, ...
  • If you set the same value for two inputs, then after getElementsByName (or getElementsByTagName ...) you need to remember 0 or 1 is sender or receiver. Later, if you change the order of 2 form in HTML, you need to check this code again

If you use form, then you can use name, address, ...

8
<input type="text" onkeyup="trackChange(this.value)" id="myInput">
<script>
    function trackChange(value) {
        window.open("http://www.google.com/search?output=search&q=" + value)
    }
</script>
8

You can use onkeyup when you have more than one input field. Suppose you have four or input. Then document.getElementById('something').value is annoying. We need to write four lines to fetch the value of an input field.

So, you can create a function that store value in object on keyup or keydown event.

Example:

<div class="container">
    <div>
        <label for="">Name</label>
        <input type="text" name="fname" id="fname" onkeyup=handleInput(this)>
    </div>
    <div>
        <label for="">Age</label>
        <input type="number" name="age" id="age" onkeyup=handleInput(this)>
    </div>
    <div>
        <label for="">Email</label>
        <input type="text" name="email" id="email" onkeyup=handleInput(this)>
    </div>
    <div>
        <label for="">Mobile</label>
        <input type="number" name="mobile" id="number" onkeyup=handleInput(this)>
    </div>
    <div>
        <button onclick=submitData()>Submit</button>
    </div>
</div>

JavaScript:

<script>
    const data = { };

    function handleInput(e){
        data[e.name] = e.value;
    }

    function submitData(){
        console.log(data.fname); // Get the first name from the object
        console.log(data); // return object
    }
</script>
6

Tested in Chrome and Firefox:

Get value by element id:

<input type="text" maxlength="512" id="searchTxt" class="searchField"/>
<input type="button" value="Get Value" onclick="alert(searchTxt.value)">

Set value in form element:

<form name="calc" id="calculator">
  <input type="text" name="input">
  <input type="button" value="Set Value" onclick="calc.input.value='Set Value'">
</form>

https://jsfiddle.net/tuq79821/

Also have a look at a JavaScript calculator implementation.

From @bugwheels94: when using this method, be aware of this issue.

5
<input id="new" >
<button  onselect="myFunction()">it</button>
<script>
    function myFunction() {
        document.getElementById("new").value = "a";
    }
</script>
3

One can use the form.elements to get all elements in a form. If an element has id it can be found with .namedItem("id"). Example:

var myForm = document.getElementById("form1");
var text = myForm.elements.namedItem("searchTxt").value;
var url = "http://www.myurl.com/search/" + text;

Source: w3schools

3

function handleValueChange() {
    var y = document.getElementById('textbox_id').value;
    var x = document.getElementById('result');
    x.innerHTML = y;
}

function changeTextarea() {
  var a = document.getElementById('text-area').value;
  var b = document.getElementById('text-area-result');
  b.innerHTML = a;
}
input {
  padding: 5px;
}

p {
  white-space: pre;
}
<input type="text" id="textbox_id" placeholder="Enter string here..." oninput="handleValueChange()">
<p id="result"></p>

<textarea name="" id="text-area" cols="20" rows="5" oninput="changeTextarea()"></textarea>
<p id="text-area-result"></p>

0
function searchURL() {
   window.location = 'http://www.myurl.com/search/' + searchTxt.value
}

So basically searchTxt.value will return the value of the input field with id='searchTxt'.

0

Short Answer

You can get the value of text input field using JavaScript with this code: input_text_value = console.log(document.getElementById("searchTxt").value)

More info

textObject has a property of value you can set and get this property.

To set you can assign a new value: document.getElementById("searchTxt").value = "new value"

0

Simple JavaScript:

function copytext(text) {
    var textField = document.createElement('textarea');
    textField.innerText = text;
    document.body.appendChild(textField);
    textField.select();
    document.execCommand('copy');
    textField.remove();
}

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.