212
votes

So I've got code that looks like this:

<input class="messageCheckbox" type="checkbox" value="3" name="mailId[]">
<input class="messageCheckbox" type="checkbox" value="1" name="mailId[]">

I just need Javascript to get the value of whatever checkbox is currently checked.

EDIT: To add, there will only be ONE checked box.

12
You needs javascript code or jQuery?Andrey Vorobyev
Why not use radio button?PraveenVenu
Because I'm writing a plugin for a siteMatthew 'mandatory' Bryant
If you need only one checkbox, why don't you use radio buttons? this is the more suitable UI component for this job.Tal Yaron
@TalYaron Can you deselect a radio buttons ? I think not without js code. Maybe the OP want to deselect the box easily.R3tep

12 Answers

283
votes

For modern browsers:

var checkedValue = document.querySelector('.messageCheckbox:checked').value;

By using jQuery:

var checkedValue = $('.messageCheckbox:checked').val();

Pure javascript without jQuery:

var checkedValue = null; 
var inputElements = document.getElementsByClassName('messageCheckbox');
for(var i=0; inputElements[i]; ++i){
      if(inputElements[i].checked){
           checkedValue = inputElements[i].value;
           break;
      }
}
285
votes

None of the above worked for me but simply use this:

document.querySelector('.messageCheckbox').checked;

Happy coding.

120
votes

I am using this in my code.Try this

var x=$("#checkbox").is(":checked");

If the checkbox is checked x will be true otherwise it will be false.

17
votes

in plain javascript:

function test() {
    var cboxes = document.getElementsByName('mailId[]');
    var len = cboxes.length;
    for (var i=0; i<len; i++) {
        alert(i + (cboxes[i].checked?' checked ':' unchecked ') + cboxes[i].value);
    }
}
function selectOnlyOne(current_clicked) {
    var cboxes = document.getElementsByName('mailId[]');
    var len = cboxes.length;
    for (var i=0; i<len; i++) {
        cboxes[i].checked = (cboxes[i] == current);
    }
}
5
votes

$(document).ready(function() {
  var ckbox = $("input[name='ips']");
  var chkId = '';
  $('input').on('click', function() {
    
    if (ckbox.is(':checked')) {
      $("input[name='ips']:checked").each ( function() {
   			chkId = $(this).val() + ",";
        chkId = chkId.slice(0, -1);
 	  });
       
       alert ( $(this).val() ); // return all values of checkboxes checked
       alert(chkId); // return value of checkbox checked
    }     
  });
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<input type="checkbox" name="ips" value="12520">
<input type="checkbox" name="ips" value="12521">
<input type="checkbox" name="ips" value="12522">
5
votes

This does not directly answer the question, but may help future visitors.


If you want to have a variable always be the current state of the checkbox (rather than having to keep checking its state), you can modify the onchange event to set that variable.

This can be done in the HTML:

<input class='messageCheckbox' type='checkbox' onchange='some_var=this.checked;'>

or with JavaScript:

cb = document.getElementsByClassName('messageCheckbox')[0]
cb.addEventListener('change', function(){some_var = this.checked})
3
votes

Use this:

alert($(".messageCheckbox").is(":checked").val())

This assumes the checkboxes to check have the class "messageCheckbox", otherwise you would have to do a check if the input is the checkbox type, etc.

2
votes
<input class="messageCheckbox" type="checkbox" onchange="getValue(this.value)" value="3" name="mailId[]">

<input class="messageCheckbox" type="checkbox" onchange="getValue(this.value)" value="1" name="mailId[]">
function getValue(value){
    alert(value);
}
1
votes

None of the above worked for me without throwing errors in the console when the box wasn't checked so I did something along these lines instead (onclick and the checkbox function are only being used for demo purposes, in my use case it's part of a much bigger form submission function):

function checkbox() {
  var checked = false;
  if (document.querySelector('#opt1:checked')) {
     checked = true;
  }
  document.getElementById('msg').innerText = checked;
}
<input type="checkbox" onclick="checkbox()" id="opt1"> <span id="msg">Click The Box</span>
0
votes

If you're using Semantic UI React, data is passed as the second parameter to the onChange event.

You can therefore access the checked property as follows:

<Checkbox label="Conference" onChange={(e, d) => console.log(d.checked)} />
0
votes

If you want to get the values of all checkboxes using jQuery, this might help you. This will parse the list and depending on the desired result, you can execute other code. BTW, for this purpose, one does not need to name the input with brackets []. I left them off.

  $(document).on("change", ".messageCheckbox", function(evnt){
    var data = $(".messageCheckbox");
    data.each(function(){
      console.log(this.defaultValue, this.checked);
      // Do something... 
    });
  }); /* END LISTENER messageCheckbox */
-4
votes

In my project, I usually use this snippets:

var type[];
$("input[name='messageCheckbox']:checked").each(function (i) {
                type[i] = $(this).val();
            });

And it works well.