PHP: HTML: send HTML select option attribute in POST PHP: HTML: send HTML select option attribute in POST php php

PHP: HTML: send HTML select option attribute in POST


<form name="add" method="post">     <p>Age:</p>     <select name="age">        <option value="1_sre">23</option>        <option value="2_sam">24</option>        <option value="5_john">25</option>     </select>     <input type="submit" name="submit"/></form>

You will have the selected value in $_POST['age'], e.g. 1_sre. Then you will be able to split the value and get the 'stud_name'.

$stud = explode("_",$_POST['age']);$stud_id = $stud[0];$stud_name = $stud[1];


You can do this with JQuery

Simply:

   <form name='add'>   Age: <select id="age" name='age'>   <option value='1' stud_name='sre'>23</option>   <option value='2' stud_name='sam'>24</option>   <option value='5' stud_name='john'>25</option>   </select>   <input type='hidden' id="name" name="name" value=""/>   <input type='submit' name='submit'/>   </form>

Add this code in Header section:

<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.9.0.min.js"></script>

Now JQuery function

<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">$(function() {      $("#age").change(function(){      var studentNmae= $('option:selected', this).attr('stud_name');      $('#name').val(studentNmae);   });});</script>

you can use both values as

$name = $_POST['name'];$value = $_POST['age'];


You will have to use JavaScript. The browser will only send the value of the selected option (so its not PHP's fault).

What your JS should do is hook into the form's submit event and create a hidden field with the value of the selected option's stud_name value. This hidden field will then get sent to the server.

That being said ... you shouldn't relay on the client to provide the correct data. You already know what stud_name should be for a given value on the server (since you are outputting it). So just apply the same logic when you are processing the form.