How can I use <time> tag in <input>'s value attribute? - html

I have an order form and I need to do something like this:
<input id="myInput" type="text" name="myInput" value='<time datetime="2015-01-01" itemprop="startDate">1.1.2015</time>' class="width-100" readonly />
but in the browser, in the input area, where should be displayed just: 1.1.2015, as I supposed, is displayed the whole time tag: <time datetime="2015-01-01" itemprop="startDate">1.1.2015</time>
...idk why, and I can't figure out how to make this work.
The time tag in input's value is based on date selected from DB and returned by function, like: return '<time datetime="'.date('Y-m-d', strtotime($from)).'" itemprop="startDate">'.date('j.n.Y', strtotime($from)).'</time>';
Any advice would be helpful. Thanks

You can write almost anything you want inside an HTML attribute, as long as you encode it properly (e.g. < instead of <, " instead of ", etc.). All decent programming languages provide built-in methods to take care of the dirty details. Whether those values are valid, meaningful or useful in the context of the precise attribute is a different thing.
<input> elements are designed to hold plain text. Whatever you write into the value attribute will be rendered to the user as-is. If you type HTML tags, you'll display HTML code, nothing else.
If you want to send form data to the server, you can simply use form fields, as you are already doing. The missing bit is that form fields do not need to be visible. There's a specific control for hidden data: <input type="hidden">. From MDN reference:
hidden: A control that is not displayed, but whose value is submitted to the server.

Related

Create/Place an anchor <A HREF> within an <INPUT> field

Is there any way to allow a link/anchor within an input field so that whatever text is in the field is ALSO clickable and actionable?
This is unfortunately not possible in HTML 4 or below. Even with HTML5 which has several new INPUT TYPEs, including URL, it only does validation and has some other useful functions, but won't give you want you want.
You might look for some jQuery plugins that can help you do this, most use the same principals behind Rich Text or other online/web-based HTML WYSIWYG editors. I've had trouble locating them myself.
These 3 situations (that I can think of right now) are pretty much what you will face natively with HTML4 or below, as text in an actual HTML4 INPUT textbox is pure text. It is not html and therefore NOT clickable. Here are some variations:
The INPUT tag's VALUE attribute, also referenced as the corresponding DOM object's "value" property (which is basically what you've been doing, and the most you can hope for, if you decide that you MUST have the text that's ACTUALLY inside the textbox (because the text inside the textbox is the VALUE attribute, as I have it with "http://yahoo.com" in this example):
<input id="myTxtbox" type="text" value="http://yahoo.com">
where the INPUT's VALUE = "http://yahoo.com", which you can retrieve with:
in pure javascript:
document.getElementById("myTxtbox").value
in jQuery:
$("myTxtBox").val()
When your link/url is the text in between the <INPUT> and </INPUT>, i.e. the text/innerText of the textbox. This is useless for your question/scenario since it's not clickable, and more importantly NOT INSIDE the textbox. However, someone might want to use this to retrieve any text that you may be using as a label (if you're not using the <label> tag itself already that is):
<input id="myTxtbox" type="text">
http://yahoo.com
</input>
The textbox's text/innerText is NOT an attribute here, only a DOM object property, but can still be retrieved:
pure javascript:
document.getElementById("myTxtbox").innerText
jQuery:
$("myTxtBox").text() -- you would use this to capure any text that you may be using as a label (if you're not using the tag).
The result being: http://yahoo.com
When your link/url is the form of an ANCHOR (<A>) with an HREF to your url (and visible link text) in between the <INPUT> and </INPUT>, i.e. the innerHTML of the textbox. This is getting a bit closer to what you want, as the link will appear as, and function as an actual link. However, it will NOT be inside of the textbox. It will be along side it as in example #2. Again, as stated in example #1, you CANNOT have actual working HTML, and therefore a working 'link' inside of a textbox:
<input id="myTxtbox" type="text">
<a href="http://yahoo.com">
http://yahoo.com
</a>
</input>
Once again, similarly to example #2, the textbox's innerHTML is NOT an attribute here, only a DOM object property, but can still be retrieved:
pure javascript:
document.getElementById("myTxtbox").innerHTML
jQuery:
$("myTxtBox").html()
The result being: http://yahoo.com

Is it valid HTML to use input elements without id and name attribute only?

I'm reworking a site which uses inputs like this multiple times throughout a page:
<input type="text" name="delDate" value="06.03.2012" />
There's always an adjacent hidden input, which gives the date enterted above a specific id, when the form is submitted, but I'm wondering if doing it like this (and omitting an input#id is a valid way doing things, since the W3C validator does not complain about it.
Thanks for some input!
Yes, that is valid. The id attribute is not required.
The problem of doing this is not that it is a validity problem but that it creates an accessibility problem (i.e., it may confuse screen readers for disabled users). It is generally considered best to have a label with a "for" attribute that matches the "id" attribute of the associated input element.

What is the use of name, id and value?

Why do we use the the name, id and value attributes with html elements? What are they important and how are they interpreted? What are the differences between them? I have looked at w3schools and every tutorial but I would like a simple explanation from a person.
What is the difference between just doing:
<form>
<input type="text" />
</form>
and
<form>
<input type="text" name="name" />
</form>
what are the benefits of using these attributes?
name - passed to the server in forms
id - a unique identifier to the HTML element
value - the value of an input or textarea element
The presence of a name attribute in an input element causes a name=value pair to be included in the form data, if the value is not empty. In the absence of such an attribute, the form field does not make any contribution to the form data.
The id attribute can be used to give an element a unique identifier that can be used in client-side scripting and styling. It has nothing to do with the functionality of the name attribute.
The value attribute in a text input box specifies the initial (default) content of the input field.
Each form element in your application must save some information for you. Those are value.
When you want process your forms using a server-side programming language, you must point to your wanted element. Here, you need name to fetch your form elements values.
Also, sometimes you might need to process your form client-side or do something else on elements in your HTML document, now one way to point to them can be an id.
id is usually referred to by, or used in relation to, CSS styling. name is usually referred to by data-related php or or other server-side scripting , and value is the "content" ascribed to that element, so if input value = "hello", then that is what will appear in the text input field.
One point that the other answers don't make clear, is that the purpose of an attribute can differ depending on which element it belongs to.
So while an id attribute identifies an element no matter where it is, the name attribute serves a different purpose on the iframe and object than it does on the meta element, which is again different from its purpose on the submittable elements button, input, keygen, object, select and textarea. The param element and the map element both have name attributes, each for a different purpose, while the form element, fieldset element and output element use their name attributes for a more or less common purpose, but different from the other elements.
Similarly, the value attribute on the input, button and option elements serve similar but slightly different purposes, and the progress and meter elements share a similarly purposed value attribute, but each of the param, li, and data (WHATWG HTML living standard only) elements has a value attribute with a purpose dedicated to that particular element.
To understand all the purposes properly, I recommend that you at least read the spec.

How to fill an HTML form with CSS?

I have an HTML form with radio buttons, check boxes, text fields and drop down lists.
Since I want user to fill everything in my form, none of the radio buttons and check boxes are checked and the text fields are empty.
I would like to write a CSS file that will fill the form with answers (I don't want to change my HTML file).
Is this possible ?
I would appreciate an example or any other idea ?
Thanks !
No, it isn't possible. CSS is for style, not markup, and changing the contents of an input field requires modification of the markup.
It sounds like you might want to consider JavaScript, which can be used to alter the contents of any element, including form elements.
Javascript is your best bet. If you want to fill in -sample- answers, however, like 'First Name' in the text area what would be labelled "First Name: " you can do something like <input type='text' value='First Name' name='emailForm'> and the value attribute will be filled in when the page loads.
You can use jQuery to accomplish what you want quite easily, using CSS-style syntax.
Here's a sample form:
<form ...>
<input name="firstName" />
<input name="lastName" />
</form>
And corresponding jQuery/JavaScript:
$(function () {
$("input[name=firstName]").val("John");
$("input[name=lastName]").val("Doe");
});
Should be easy enough to extend to a larger and more complex form. You can easily use classes or ids on the elements and in the jQuery selectors, as well.
CSS is for designing and styling the webpage. Although its capabilities have been exploited to pull of many tricks it is not a fix-all solution. What you need to do is pull the data you need to fill and put it in your fields.
You can do this two ways:
Use a server side language like PHP/ASP.Net to pre-fill this information.
Use Javascript/Jquery/MooTools or some other framework to fill it on the client-side, picking up the data from the server.
If the information is static then it is very easy, because you can just put this info as a part of the HTML content itself.
If this answer doesn't work for you, add more information to your question.

Difference between id and name attributes in HTML

What is the difference between the id and name attributes? They both seem to serve the same purpose of providing an identifier.
I would like to know (specifically with regards to HTML forms) whether or not using both is necessary or encouraged for any reasons.
The name attribute is used when sending data in a form submission. Different controls respond differently. For example, you may have several radio buttons with different id attributes, but the same name. When submitted, there is just the one value in the response - the radio button you selected.
Of course, there's more to it than that, but it will definitely get you thinking in the right direction.
Use name attributes for form controls (such as <input> and <select>), as that's the identifier used in the POST or GET call that happens on form submission.
Use id attributes whenever you need to address a particular HTML element with CSS, JavaScript or a fragment identifier. It's possible to look up elements by name, too, but it's simpler and more reliable to look them up by ID.
Here is a brief summary:
id is used to identify the HTML element through the Document
Object Model (via JavaScript or styled with CSS). id is expected
to be unique within the page.
name corresponds to the form element and identifies what is posted
back to the server.
The way I think about it and use it is simple:
id is used for CSS and JavaScript/jQuery (it has to be unique on a page).
name is used for form handling on the server when a form is submitted via HTML (it has to be unique in a form - to some extent, see Paul's comment below).
See id= vs name=:
What’s the difference? The short answer is, use both and don’t worry about it. But if you want to understand this goofiness, here’s the skinny:
id= is for use as a target like this: <some-element id="XXX"></some-element> for links like this: <a href="#XXX".
name= is also used to label the fields in the message send to a server with an HTTP (HyperText Transfer Protocol) GET or POST when you hit submit in a form.
id= labels the fields for use by JavaScript and Java DOM (Document Object Model).
The names in name= must be unique within a form. The names in id= must be unique within the entire document.
Sometimes the name= and id= names will differ, because the server is expecting the same name from various forms in the same document or various radio buttons in the same form as in the example above. The id= must be unique; the name= must not be.
JavaScript needed unique names, but there were too many documents already out here without unique name= names, so the W3 people invented the id tag that was required to be unique. Unfortunately older browsers did not understand it. So you need both naming schemes in your forms.
Note: attribute "name" for some tags like <a> is not supported in HTML5.
The ID tag - used by CSS, define a unique instance of a div, span or other elements. Appears within the JavaScript DOM model, allowing you to access them with various function calls.
The Name tag for fields - this is unique per form -- unless you are doing an array which you want to pass to PHP/server-side processing. You can access it via JavaScript by name, but I think that it does not appear as a node in the DOM or some restrictions may apply (you cannot use .innerHTML, for example, if I recall correctly).
Generally, it is assumed that name is always superseded by id. This is true, to some extent, but not for form fields and frame names, practically speaking. For example, with form elements, the name attribute is used to determine the name-value pairs to be sent to a server-side program and should not be eliminated. Browsers do not use id in that manner. To be on the safe side, you could use the name and id attributes on form elements. So, we would write the following:
<form id="myForm" name="myForm">
<input type="text" id="userName" name="userName" />
</form>
To ensure compatibility, having matching name and id attribute values when both are defined is a good idea. However, be careful—some tags, particularly radio buttons, must have nonunique name values, but require unique id values.
Once again, this should reference that id is not simply a replacement for name; they are different in purpose. Furthermore, do not discount the old-style approach, a deep look at modern libraries shows such syntax style used for performance and ease purposes at times. Your goal should always be in favor of compatibility.
Now in most elements, the name attribute has been deprecated in favor of the more ubiquitous id attribute. However, in some cases, particularly form fields (<button>, <input>, <select>, and <textarea>), the name attribute lives on, because it continues to be required to set the name-value pair for form submission. Also, we find that some elements, notably frames and links, may continue to use the name attribute, because it is often useful for retrieving these elements by name.
There is a clear distinction between id and name. Very often when name continues on, we can set the values the same. However, id must be unique, and name in some cases shouldn’t—think radio buttons. Sadly, the uniqueness of id values, while caught by markup validation, is not as consistent as it should be. CSS implementation in browsers will style objects that share an id value; thus, we may not catch markup or style errors that could affect our JavaScript until runtime.
This is taken from the book JavaScript - The Complete Reference by Thomas-Powell.
<form action="demo_form.asp">
<label for="male">Male</label>
<input type="radio" name="sex" id="male" value="male"><br>
<label for="female">Female</label>
<input type="radio" name="sex" id="female" value="female"><br>
<input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
The forum thread below has answers to the same basic question, but basically, id is used for scripting identification and name is for server-side.
id vs. name attribute for HTML controls
name is deprecated for link targets, and invalid in HTML5. It no longer works at least in the latest Firefox (v13). Change <a name="hello"> to <a id="hello">.
The target does not need to be an <a> tag. It can be <p id="hello"> or <h2 id="hello">, etc. which is often cleaner code.
As other posts say clearly, name is still used (needed) in forms. It is also still used in META tags.
name vs. id
name
Name of the element. For example used by the server to identify the
fields in form submits.
Supporting elements are <button>, <form>, <fieldset>, <iframe>,
<input>, <keygen>, <object>, <output>, <select>, <textarea>, <map>,
<meta>, and <param>
Name does not have to be unique.
id
Often used with CSS to style a specific element. The value of this
attribute must be unique.
Id is a global attribute. Global attributes can be used on all elements, though the attributes may have no effect on some elements.
Must be unique in the whole document.
This attribute's value must not contain white spaces, in contrast to
the class attribute, which allows space-separated values.
Using characters except ASCII letters and digits, '_', '-' and '.'
may cause compatibility problems, as they weren't allowed in HTML 4.
Though this restriction has been lifted in HTML 5, an ID should start
with a letter for compatibility.
<body>
<form action="">
<label for="username">Username</label>
<input type="text" id="username" name="username">
<button>Submit!</button>
</form>
</body>
As we can see here, "id" and "for" elements are interconnected. If you click on the label (Username) then the input field will be highlighted (this is useful for mobile users and is considered as a good practice).
On the other hand, the "name" element is useful while submitting the form. Whatever you enter in the input field it will be displayed on the URL. Please see the attached image.
The ID of a form input element has nothing to do with the data contained within the element. IDs are for hooking the element with JavaScript and CSS. The name attribute, however, is used in the HTTP request sent by your browser to the server as a variable name associated with the data contained in the value attribute.
For instance:
<form>
<input type="text" name="user" value="bob">
<input type="password" name="password" value="abcd1234">
</form>
When the form is submitted, the form data will be included in the HTTP header like this:
If you add an ID attribute, it will not change anything in the HTTP header. It will just make it easier to hook it with CSS and JavaScript.
ID is used to uniquely identify an element.
Name is used in forms. Although you submit a form, if you don’t give any name, nothing will will be submitted. Hence form elements need a name to get identified by form methods like "get or push".
And only the ones with the name attribute will go out.
If you're not using the form's own submit method to send information to a server (and are instead doing it using JavaScript) you can use the name attribute to attach extra information to an input - rather like pairing it with a hidden input value, but it looks neater because it's incorporated into the input.
This bit does still currently work in Firefox although I suppose in the future it might not get allowed through.
You can have multiple input fields with the same name value, as long as you aren't planning to submit the old fashioned way.
Id:
It is used to identify the HTML element through the Document Object Model (DOM) (via JavaScript or styled with CSS).
Id is expected to be unique within the page.
Name corresponds to the form element and identifies what is posted back to the server.
Example:
<form action="action_page.php" id="Myform">
First name: <input type="text" name="FirstName"><br>
<input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
<p>The "Last name" field below is outside the form element, but still part of the form.</p>
Last name: <input type="text" name="LastName" form="Myform">
In all the time this question has been around, I am chagrined (and perhaps a bit saddened) that nobody has thought to mention accessibility which, though always important, has been steadily gaining support amongst both management and software engineers (just from my personal observations; no hard data to back that up).
One statistic I can provide is this (source):
So awareness of accessibility shortcomings show a steadily growing trend. The same reference mentions that, from those numbers, one can observe that at least one lawsuit is filed every hour!
So how does accessibility weigh in on name vs id?
According to the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C):
The for attribute of the label must exactly match the id of the
form control.
Based on personal experiences and according to the W3Schools description for attributes:
ID is a global attribute and applies to virtually all elements in HTML. It is used to uniquely identify elements on the Web page, and its value is mostly accessed from the frontend (typically through JavaScript or jQuery).
name is an attribute that is useful to specific elements (such as form elements, etc.) in HTML. Its value is mostly sent to the backend for processing.
HTML Attribute Reference
Below is an interesting use of the id attribute. It is used within the <form> tag and used to identify the form for <input> elements outside of the </form> boundaries so that they will be included with the other <input> fields within the form.
<form action="action_page.php" id="form1">
First name: <input type="text" name="fname"><br>
<input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
<p>The "Last name" field below is outside the form element, but still part of the form.</p>
Last name: <input type="text" name="lname" form="form1">
There is no literal difference between an id and name.
name is an identifier and is used in the HTTP request sent by the browser to serve as a variable name associated with data contained in the value attribute of the element.
The id on the other hand is a unique identifier for browser, client side and JavaScript. Hence the form needs an id while its elements need a name.
id is more specifically used in adding attributes to unique elements. In DOM methods, Id is used in JavaScript for referencing the specific element you want your action to take place on.
For example:
<html>
<body>
<h1 id="demo"></h1>
<script>
document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = "Hello World!";
</script>
</body>
</html>
Same can be achieved by name attribute, but it's preferred to use id in a form and name for small form elements like the input tag or select tag.
Both name and id is targetable by # so not sure why ID was mentioned for this task exclusively.
I often Inspect those attributes to create specific links to bookmark (where clicking on header with mouse cursor to do the same is not provided for some reason) such as the Option File Inclusions
section of MySQL 5.6 4.2.2.2 Using Option Files documentation:
https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.6/en/option-files.html#option-file-inclusions
where it's defined as <a name="option-file-inclusions"></a> (with absolutely no forms involved).
I think, the name attribute is also older than id in HTML.
The id will give an element an id, so once you write real code, (like JavaScript) you can use the id to read elements. The name is just a name, so the user can see the name of the element, I guess.
Example:
<h1 id="heading">text</h1>
<script>
document.getElementById("heading"); // Reads the element that has the id "heading".
</script>
// You can also use something like this:
document.getElementById("heading").value; // Reads the value of the selected element.