12

What is the easiest and most graceful way to auto-submit an AJAX form when a drop-down box's option is selected? I'm creating an administration page where the admin can modify user permissions (where "permissions" is stored as an integer), and I would like the "permissions" field to be a drop-down box that automatically submits and updates when the administrator clicks on the option he wants the user to have.

Here's the stripped-down version of what I'm currently looking at. I need to know the best way to convert this to a remote form that automatically submits when an option is clicked on.

Feel free to point out any tangential suggestions or anything else...I'm relatively new to Rails, and only just reaching the point where I can write code without constantly referencing others' work.

<!-- This is the "index" view, by the way. -->
<% for membership in @story.memberships %>
  <% form_for membership do |f| %>
    <%= f.select :permissions, [['none', 0], ['admin', 9]] %>
  <% end %>
<% end %>
Adam Rezich
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5 Answers5

15

There are a couple ways to handle this. Certainly the observe field approach is one, but you could also use a simple javascript or a remote_function to do it:

Here is the simple JS approach:

<% remote_form_for membership do |f| %>
    <%= f.select :permissions, [['none', 0], ['admin', 9]], {}, :onchange => 'this.form.submit()' %>
<% end %>

The other way would be something like this, and would eschew the form builder (and this may have a couple syntax errors):

<%= select_tag(:permissions, [['none', 0], ['admin', 9]], {:onchange => "#{remote_function(:url  => permissions_path(:story_id => story,
             :with => "'permission='+value")}"})

Personally I prefer the former.

DazzaL
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Scott Miller
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4

Three steps!

  1. Make your form_for a remote_form_for; add an id!
  2. Add an observe_field after your select
  3. Configure your observe_field to submit your form

The last bit looks something like:

<%= observe_field "id_of_select", :function => "$('form_id').submit();" %>
Ian Terrell
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4

In Rails 3:

<%= form_for(membership, :remote => true) do |f| %>`
  <%= f.select :permissions, [['none', 0], ['admin', 9]], {}, :onchange => 'this.form.submit();' %>
<% end %>

Note that it's this.form.submit(); not onsubmit. And don't forget the Javascript semicolon.

Ron
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3

Learn how to do it without Rails using the framework of your choice. Using the Rails tags to perform AJAX can accomplish a task quickly, but can be very limiting when you need to change specific things about how the tag performs.

Read about web-standards and how to write unobtrusive javascript on these sites: http://ajaxian.com/ http://www.alistapart.com/

You'll be able to create more flexible, amazing UIs by learning how to perform AJAX without Rails.

berlin.ab
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  • Welcome to Stack. You should strive to provide specific answers to questions, or you might get voted down. While I agree with you, and also think my this.form.onsubmit() solution above was better than the one the user picked, its better to give specific answers. – Scott Miller Feb 28 '09 at 15:47
  • Thanks Scott. I'll keep that in mind. I should probably edit my post to include samples of the unobtrusive style. – berlin.ab Mar 01 '09 at 06:20
1

I am using Rails 5 & I was also facing the similar situation but in my case the answer given by @scott was not submitting the form using AJAX as expected though I added the remote: true option to the form (I don't have submit button in the form).

If somebody is also facing the similar problem try to change the JS code like this-

<% form_for membership remote: true, id: '#member_form' do |f| %>
  <%= f.select :permissions, [['none', 0], ['admin', 9]], onchange: '$("#member_form").trigger("submit");' %>
<% end %>

Hope this helps..

Swaps
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