Reputation: 13344
I have some disabled inputs in a form and I want to send them to a server, but Chrome excludes them from the request.
Is there any workaround for this without adding a hidden field?
<form action="/Media/Add">
<input type="hidden" name="Id" value="123" />
<!-- this does not appear in request -->
<input type="textbox" name="Percentage" value="100" disabled="disabled" />
</form>
Upvotes: 435
Views: 270678
Reputation: 17990
Make it readonly with proper style:
<input name="client1" readonly>
input:read-only {
background-color: var(--bs-secondary-bg);
...
}
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 3787
I had exactly the same problem, but did not work for me, because I have select HTML element, and it's read-only state allowed to change its value. So I used select in one condition and input in another:
<% If IsEditWizard Then %>
<%For Each item In GetCompaniesByCompanyType("ResponsibleEntity")%>
<% If item.CompanyCode.EqualsIgnoreCase(prCompany.GetAsString("LinkedCompany")) Then %>
<input type="text" value="<%: item.CompanyName %>" tabindex="3" size="12" maxlength="12" readonly="readonly" />
<input type="hidden" id="LinkedCompany" name="LinkedCompany" value="<%:item.CompanyCode %>" tabindex="3" size="12" maxlength="12" />
<%End If %>
<%Next %>
<%Else %>
<select id="LinkedCompany" name="LinkedCompany" class="w-auto" <%= If(IsEditWizard, "disabled", "") %>>
<option value="">Please Select</option>
<%For Each item In GetCompaniesByCompanyType("ResponsibleEntity")%>
<option value="<%:item.CompanyCode %>" <%: IIf(item.CompanyCode.EqualsIgnoreCase(prCompany.GetAsString("LinkedCompany")), "selected", String.Empty) %>><%: item.CompanyName %></option>
<%Next %>
</select>
<%End If %>
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 2406
Simple workaround - just use hidden field as placeholder for select, checkbox and radio.
From this code to -
<form action="/Media/Add">
<input type="hidden" name="Id" value="123" />
<!-- this does not appear in request -->
<input type="textbox" name="Percentage" value="100" disabled="disabled" />
<select name="gender" disabled="disabled">
<option value="male">Male</option>
<option value="female" selected>Female</option>
</select>
</form>
that code -
<form action="/Media/Add">
<input type="hidden" name="Id" value="123" />
<input type="textbox" value="100" readonly />
<input type="hidden" name="gender" value="female" />
<select name="gender" disabled="disabled">
<option value="male">Male</option>
<option value="female" selected>Female</option>
</select>
</form>
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 19
Define Colors With RGBA Values
Add the Following code under style
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<style>
#p7 {background-color:rgba(215,215,215,1);}
</style>
</head>
<body>
Disabled Grey none tranparent
<form action="/Media/Add">
<input type="hidden" name="Id" value="123" />
<!-- this does not appear in request -->
<input id="p7" type="textbox" name="Percentage" value="100" readonly="readonly"" />
</form>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1617
In addition to Tom Blodget's response, you may simply add @HtmlBeginForm as the form action, like this:
<form id="form" method="post" action="@Html.BeginForm("action", "controller", FormMethod.Post, new { onsubmit = "this.querySelectorAll('input').forEach(i => i.disabled = false)" })"
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 25650
Elements with the disabled
attribute are not submitted or you can say their values are not posted (see the second bullet point under Step 3 in the HTML 5 spec for building the form data set).
I.e.,
<input type="textbox" name="Percentage" value="100" disabled="disabled" />
FYI, per 17.12.1 in the HTML 4 spec:
You can use readonly
attribute in your case, by doing this you will be able to post your field's data.
I.e.,
<input type="textbox" name="Percentage" value="100" readonly="readonly" />
FYI, per 17.12.2 in the HTML 4 spec:
Upvotes: 883
Reputation: 13110
Semantically this feels like the correct behaviour
I'd be asking myself "Why do I need to submit this value?"
If you have a disabled input on a form, then presumably you do not want the user changing the value directly
Any value that is displayed in a disabled input should either be
Assuming that the server processing the form is the same as the server serving it, all the information to reproduce the values of the disabled inputs should be available at processing
In fact, to preserve data integrity - even if the value of the disabled input was sent to the processing server, you should really be validating it. This validation would require the same level of information as you would need to reproduce the values anyway!
I'd almost argue that read-only inputs shouldn't be sent in the request either
Happy to be corrected, but all the use cases I can think of where read-only/disabled inputs need to be submitted are really just styling issues in disguise
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 41
I find this works easier. readonly the input field, then style it so the end user knows it's read only. inputs placed here (from AJAX for example) can still submit, without extra code.
<input readonly style="color: Grey; opacity: 1; ">
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 20772
To post values from disabled inputs in addition to enabled inputs, you can simply re-enable all of the form's inputs as it is being submitted.
<form onsubmit="this.querySelectorAll('input').forEach(i => i.disabled = false)">
<!-- Re-enable all input elements on submit so they are all posted,
even if currently disabled. -->
<!-- form content with input elements -->
</form>
If you prefer jQuery:
<form onsubmit="$(this).find('input').prop('disabled', false)">
<!-- Re-enable all input elements on submit so they are all posted,
even if currently disabled. -->
<!-- form content with input elements -->
</form>
For ASP.NET MVC C# Razor, you add the submit handler like this:
using (Html.BeginForm("ActionName", "ControllerName", FormMethod.Post,
// Re-enable all input elements on submit so they are all posted, even if currently disabled.
new { onsubmit = "this.querySelectorAll('input').forEach(i => i.disabled = false)" } ))
{
<!-- form content with input elements -->
}
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 15
You can totally avoid disabling, it is painful since html form format won't send anything related to <p>
or some other label.
So you can instead put regular
<input text tag just before you have `/>
add this
readonly="readonly"
It wouldn't disable your text but wouldn't change by user so it work like <p>
and will send value through form. Just remove border if you would like to make it more like <p>
tag
Upvotes: -8
Reputation: 1793
I'm updating this answer since is very useful. Just add readonly to the input.
So the form will be:
<form action="/Media/Add">
<input type="hidden" name="Id" value="123" />
<input type="textbox" name="Percentage" value="100" readonly/>
</form>
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 605
Using Jquery and sending the data with ajax, you can solve your problem:
<script>
$('#form_id').submit(function() {
$("#input_disabled_id").prop('disabled', false);
//Rest of code
})
</script>
Upvotes: 26
Reputation: 736
If you absolutely have to have the field disabled and pass the data you could use a javascript to input the same data into a hidden field (or just set the hidden field too). This would allow you to have it disabled but still post the data even though you'd be posting to another page.
Upvotes: 9