Add disabled attribute to input element using Javascript

JavascriptJqueryInputOnclick

Javascript Problem Overview


I have an input box and I want it to be disabled and at the same time hide it to avoid problems when porting my form.

So far I have the following code to hide my input:

$(".shownextrow").click(function() { 
    $(this).closest("tr").next().show().find('.longboxsmall').hide();
});

This is the input that gets hidden as a result:

<input class="longboxsmall" type="text" />

How can I also add the disabled attribute to the input?

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

$("input").attr("disabled", true); as of... I don't know any more.

It's December 2013 and I really have no idea what to tell you.

First it was always .attr(), then it was always .prop(), so I came back here updated the answer and made it more accurate.

Then a year later jQuery changed their minds again and I don't even want to keep track of this.

Long story short, as of right now, this is the best answer: "you can use both... but it depends."

You should read this answer instead: https://stackoverflow.com/a/5876747/257493

And their release notes for that change are included here:

> Neither .attr() nor .prop() should be used for getting/setting value. Use the .val() method instead (although using .attr("value", "somevalue") will continue to work, as it did before 1.6). > > Summary of Preferred Usage > > The .prop() method should be used for boolean attributes/properties and for properties which do not exist in html (such as window.location). All other attributes (ones you can see in the html) can and should continue to be manipulated with the .attr() method.

Or in other words:

> ".prop = non-document stuff" > > ".attr" = document stuff

... ...

May we all learn a lesson here about API stability...

Solution 2 - Javascript

Working code from my sources:

HTML WORLD

<select name="select_from" disabled>...</select>

JS WORLD

var from = jQuery('select[name=select_from]');

//add disabled
from.attr('disabled', 'disabled');



//remove it
from.removeAttr("disabled");

Solution 3 - Javascript

If you're using jQuery then there are a few different ways to set the disabled attribute.

var $element = $(...);
    $element.prop('disabled', true);
    $element.attr('disabled', true); 

    // The following do not require jQuery
    $element.get(0).disabled = true;
    $element.get(0).setAttribute('disabled', true);
    $element[0].disabled = true;
    $element[0].setAttribute('disabled', true);

Solution 4 - Javascript

$(element).prop('disabled', true); //true|disabled will work on all
$(element).attr('disabled', true); 
element.disabled = true;
element.setAttribute('disabled', true);

All of the above are perfectly valid solutions. Choose the one that fits your needs best.

Solution 5 - Javascript

You can get the DOM element, and set the disabled property directly.

$(".shownextrow").click(function() { 
  $(this).closest("tr").next().show()
          .find('.longboxsmall').hide()[0].disabled = 'disabled';
});

or if there's more than one, you can use each() to set all of them:

$(".shownextrow").click(function() { 
  $(this).closest("tr").next().show()
          .find('.longboxsmall').each(function() {
               this.style.display = 'none';
               this.disabled = 'disabled';
          });
});

Solution 6 - Javascript

Since the question was asking how to do this with JS I'm providing a vanilla JS implementation.

var element = document.querySelector(".your-element-class-goes-here");
// it's a good idea to check whether the element exists
if (element != null && element != undefined) {
  element.disabled = "disabled";
}

Solution 7 - Javascript

Just use jQuery's attr() method

$(this).closest("tr").next().show().find('.longboxsmall').attr('disabled', 'disabled');

Solution 8 - Javascript

in JQuery you can use the following functions:

$("input").prop('disabled', true);
$("input").prop('disabled', false);

For native js you can use:

document.getElementById("myElement").disabled = true;

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
Questionuser342391View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptIncognitoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptMircea StanciuView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptiConnorView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Javascriptuser1596138View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - Javascriptuser113716View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - JavascriptViktorView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - JavascriptGabeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - JavascriptAristideWenceslasView Answer on Stackoverflow