154

Is there a way to use javascript and JQuery to add some additional fields to be sent from a HTTP form using POST?

I mean:

<form action="somewhere" method="POST" id="form">
  <input type="submit" name="submit" value="Send" />
</form>

<script type="text/javascript">
  $("#form").submit( function(eventObj) {
    // I want to add a field "field" with value "value" here
    // to the POST data

    return true;
  });
</script>
1

7 Answers 7

211

Yes.You can try with some hidden params.

  $("#form").submit( function(eventObj) {
      $("<input />").attr("type", "hidden")
          .attr("name", "something")
          .attr("value", "something")
          .appendTo("#form");
      return true;
  });
5
  • 46
    .appendTo(this) would probably be better.
    – jcuenod
    Jun 12, 2015 at 10:37
  • 5
    @jcuenod original appendTo('#form') is much better, because such approach allows submit another form with values from this one.
    – Andremoniy
    Oct 19, 2015 at 14:39
  • 10
    You'll have to add some extra logic to avoid accumulating these input with each submit.
    – amos
    Nov 18, 2016 at 14:09
  • 3
    You'll probably want to remove the input element before you add it in case it already exists $(this).find("input[name="+"something"+"]").remove();
    – K Vij
    Jun 4, 2020 at 4:50
  • 1
    If it's not AJAX the form and the appended field is gone on submission.
    – ed22
    Apr 8, 2022 at 16:30
64

Try this:

$('#form').submit(function(eventObj) {
    $(this).append('<input type="hidden" name="field_name" value="value" /> ');
    return true;
});
2
  • I need to add a file field dynamically. I tried having type=file, and the value also as the file (I'm using WebKitDirectory, so I actually get the file objects), however it never seems to pass it. The input text always gets passed though. Please help me out! Apr 8, 2015 at 10:40
  • 1
    My preferred answer due to using this instead of the redundant #form
    – rinogo
    Apr 30, 2015 at 16:34
18
$('#form').append('<input type="text" value="'+yourValue+'" />');
13

You can add a hidden input with whatever value you need to send:

$('#form').submit(function(eventObj) {
    $(this).append('<input type="hidden" name="someName" value="someValue">');
    return true;
});
12

May be useful for some:

(a function that allow you to add the data to the form using an object, with override for existing inputs, if there is) [pure js]

(form is a dom el, and not a jquery object [jqryobj.get(0) if you need])

function addDataToForm(form, data) {
    if(typeof form === 'string') {
        if(form[0] === '#') form = form.slice(1);
        form = document.getElementById(form);
    }

    var keys = Object.keys(data);
    var name;
    var value;
    var input;

    for (var i = 0; i < keys.length; i++) {
        name = keys[i];
        // removing the inputs with the name if already exists [overide]
        // console.log(form);
        Array.prototype.forEach.call(form.elements, function (inpt) {
             if(inpt.name === name) {
                 inpt.parentNode.removeChild(inpt);
             }
        });

        value = data[name];
        input = document.createElement('input');
        input.setAttribute('name', name);
        input.setAttribute('value', value);
        input.setAttribute('type', 'hidden');

        form.appendChild(input);
    }

    return form;
}

Use :

addDataToForm(form, {
    'uri': window.location.href,
     'kpi_val': 150,
     //...
});

you can use it like that too

var form = addDataToForm('myFormId', {
    'uri': window.location.href,
     'kpi_val': 150,
     //...
});

you can add # if you like too ("#myformid").

2
  • It is a timesaver. I checked it with a simple form. It works!
    – TuralAsgar
    Feb 3, 2022 at 14:04
  • 1
    Careful when removing inputs with the same name in a form with radios and checkboxes because uncecked fields may remove checked ones
    – xtian
    Apr 30, 2022 at 13:51
11

This works:

var form = $(this).closest('form');

form = form.serializeArray();

form = form.concat([
    {name: "customer_id", value: window.username},
    {name: "post_action", value: "Update Information"}
]);

$.post('/change-user-details', form, function(d) {
    if (d.error) {
        alert("There was a problem updating your user details")
    } 
});
3
  • 3
    Yeah, but there is no redirect to result page.
    – omikron
    Feb 26, 2016 at 10:24
  • 3
    this should work: $('body').append(form); $(form).submit(); Feb 26, 2016 at 17:39
  • This was the most helpful to me, because I have a large number of generated fields and I don't want to create hidden fields for each. Jul 2, 2020 at 10:15
-2

Expanding upon Khawer's answer, you could refrain from using jQuery - for consistency, eg.
<input type="hidden" name="field_name" value="value" />

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