I'm assuming you probably want to create a dynamic form that allows you to add multiple contacts, etc.
CodePen Example
http://codepen.io/anon/pen/yeVRgw
The Basic HTML Setup
So that you can loop through things, and for sake of your own sanity, you'll probably want to segment out each chunk within the form. We'll also set up a hidden input to track how many partitions of name,phone,email
have been created. We'll default at 1
<form action="form_sent.php" method="POST">
<input type="hidden" name="contacts" id="contacts" value="1">
<div class="form-contacts-container">
<div class="form-contact" id="form-contact-1">
<input type="text" name="name-1" id="name-1" placeholder="Name">
<input type="text" name="email-1" id="email-1" placeholder="E-mail">
<input type="text" name="phone-1" id="phone-1" placeholder="Phone">
</div>
<!-- We'll be adding additional inputs here -->
</div>
<div class="form-contacts-add">
<input type="button" value="Add More Fields" id="add-fields">
</div>
<div class="form-contacts-submit">
<input type="submit" name="submit" id="submit" value="Submit">
</div>
</form>
The JavaScript
This assumes you are using jQuery, so ensure that this is in your <head>
<script type="text/javascript" src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.3/jquery.min.js"></script>
Now we need to do a few things - firstly, attach an event listener to our button
and secondly, add a new <div class="form-contact">
with included fields to our form. We'll also need to ensure that we're counting up to make sure each section has a unique name/id, and we'll increase the hidden input value to count how many contacts have been added in total.
<script type="text/javascript">
var total = 1; // Our default for how many contacts we have
$( document ).on( 'click', '#add-fields', function() {
var addBlockId = total = total + 1;
var addBlock = document.createElement('div');
$(addBlock).addClass('form-contact');
$(addBlock).attr('id','form-contact-' + addBlockId);
var inputName = document.createElement('input');
$(inputName).attr('type','text');
$(inputName).attr('name','name-' + addBlockId);
$(inputName).attr('id','name-' + addBlockId);
$(inputName).attr('placeholder','Name');
$(inputName).appendTo($(addBlock));
var inputEmail = document.createElement('input');
$(inputEmail).attr('type','text');
$(inputEmail).attr('name','email-' + addBlockId);
$(inputEmail).attr('id','email-' + addBlockId);
$(inputEmail).attr('placeholder','E-mail');
$(inputEmail).appendTo($(addBlock));
var inputPhone = document.createElement('input');
$(inputPhone).attr('type','text');
$(inputPhone).attr('name','phone-' + addBlockId);
$(inputPhone).attr('id','phone-' + addBlockId);
$(inputPhone).attr('placeholder','Phone');
$(inputPhone).appendTo($(addBlock));
$(addBlock).appendTo($('.form-contacts-container'));
$('#contacts').val(total);
});
</script>
Processing your Form
The last piece of the puzzle is to process your form properly. Not goign to give you all the answers here, but the basic logic would be to grab the $_POST['contacts']
value we've been updated and run a loop through to grab all of your inputs and associated values. For instance in PHP
:
$total = $_POST['contacts'];
$contacts = array();
for( $i = 1; $i < $total; $i++ ) {
$this_contact = $array(
'Name' => $_POST['name-' . $i],
'Email' => $_POST['email-' . $i],
'Phone' => $_POST['phone-' . $i]
);
array_push($contacts, $this_contact);
}
var_dump( $contacts );