541
votes

I have a select control, and in a javascript variable I have a text string.

Using jQuery I want to set the selected element of the select control to be the item with the text description I have (as opposed to the value, which I don't have).

I know setting it by value is pretty trivial. e.g.

$("#my-select").val(myVal);

But I'm a bit stumped on doing it via the text description. I guess there must be a way of getting the value out from the text description, but my brain is too Friday afternoon-ed to be able to work it out.

22
@DanAtkinson was about to do the same myself. select has absolutely nothing to do with this question.thecoshman

22 Answers

772
votes

Select by description for jQuery v1.6+

var text1 = 'Two';
$("select option").filter(function() {
  //may want to use $.trim in here
  return $(this).text() == text1;
}).prop('selected', true);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

<select>
  <option value="0">One</option>
  <option value="1">Two</option>
</select>

jQuery versions below 1.6 and greater than or equal to 1.4

var text1 = 'Two';
$("select option").filter(function() {
  //may want to use $.trim in here
  return $(this).text() == text1;
}).attr('selected', true);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.0/jquery.min.js"></script>

<select>
  <option value="0">One</option>
  <option value="1">Two</option>
</select>

Note that while this approach will work in versions that are above 1.6 but less than 1.9, it has been deprecated since 1.6. It will not work in jQuery 1.9+.


Previous versions

val() should handle both cases.

$('select').val('1'); // selects "Two"
$('select').val('Two'); // also selects "Two"
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.2.3/jquery.min.js"></script>

<select>
  <option value="0">One</option>
  <option value="1">Two</option>
</select>
144
votes

I haven't tested this, but this might work for you.

$("select#my-select option")
   .each(function() { this.selected = (this.text == myVal); });
92
votes

Try this...to select the option with text myText

$("#my-Select option[text=" + myText +"]").prop("selected", true);
48
votes

I do it on this way (jQuery 1.9.1)

$("#my-select").val("Dutch").change();

Note: don't forget the change(), I had to search to long because of that :)

21
votes
$("#myselect option:contains('YourTextHere')").val();

will return the value of the first option containing your text description. Tested this and works.

15
votes

To avoid all jQuery version complications, I honestly recommend using one of these really simple javascript functions...

function setSelectByValue(eID,val)
{ //Loop through sequentially//
  var ele=document.getElementById(eID);
  for(var ii=0; ii<ele.length; ii++)
    if(ele.options[ii].value==val) { //Found!
      ele.options[ii].selected=true;
      return true;
    }
  return false;
}

function setSelectByText(eID,text)
{ //Loop through sequentially//
  var ele=document.getElementById(eID);
  for(var ii=0; ii<ele.length; ii++)
    if(ele.options[ii].text==text) { //Found!
      ele.options[ii].selected=true;
      return true;
    }
  return false;
}
14
votes

This line worked:

$("#myDropDown option:contains(myText)").attr('selected', true);
10
votes

I know this is an old post, but I couldn't get it to select by text using jQuery 1.10.3 and the solutions above. I ended up using the following code (variation of spoulson's solution):

      var textToSelect = "Hello World";

      $("#myDropDown option").each(function (a, b) {
            if ($(this).html() == textToSelect ) $(this).attr("selected", "selected");
        });

Hope it helps someone.

7
votes
 $("#Test").find("option:contains('two')").each(function(){
     if( $(this).text() == 'two' ) {
        $(this).attr("selected","selected");
     }
 });

The if statement does a exact match with "two" and "two three" will not be matched

6
votes

Easiest way with 1.7+ is:

$("#myDropDown option:text=" + myText +"").attr("selected", "selected"); 

1.9+

$("#myDropDown option:text=" + myText +"").prop("selected", "selected"); 

Tested and works.

6
votes

Here is very simple way. plz use it

$("#free").val("y").change();
4
votes

take a look at the jquery selectedbox plugin

selectOptions(value[, clear]): 

Select options by value, using a string as the parameter $("#myselect2").selectOptions("Value 1");, or a regular expression $("#myselect2").selectOptions(/^val/i);.

You can also clear already selected options: $("#myselect2").selectOptions("Value 2", true);

3
votes

Just on a side note. My selected value was not being set. And i had search all over the net. Actually i had to select a value after a call back from a web service, because i was getting data from it.

$("#SelectMonth option[value=" + DataFromWebService + "]").attr('selected', 'selected'); 
$("#SelectMonth").selectmenu('refresh', true);

So the refresh of the selector was was the only thing that i was missing.

2
votes

I found that by using attr you would end up with multiple options selected when you didn't want to - solution is to use prop:

$("#myDropDown option:text=" + myText +"").prop("selected", "selected");

1
votes

I had a problem with the examples above, and the problem was caused by the fact that my select box values are prefilled with fixed length strings of 6 characters, but the parameter being passed in wasn't fixed length.

I have an rpad function which will right pad a string, to the length specified, and with the specified character. So, after padding the parameter it works.

$('#wsWorkCenter').val(rpad(wsWorkCenter, 6, ' '));


function rpad(pStr, pLen, pPadStr) {
if (pPadStr == '') {pPadStr == ' '};
while (pStr.length < pLen)
    pStr = pStr + pPadStr;
return pStr; 
} 
1
votes
 $('#theYear').on('change', function () {
 FY = $(this).find('option:selected').text();
 $('#theFolders').each(function () {
     $('option:not(:contains(' + FY + '))', this).hide();
 });
 $('#theFolders').val(0);
});

$('#theYear').on('mousedown', function () {
 $('#theFolders option').show().find('option:contains("Select")', this).attr('selected', 'selected');
});
0
votes

This accepted answer does not seem correct, while .val('newValue') is correct for the function, trying to retrieve a select by its name does not work for me, I had to use the id and classname to get my element

0
votes

Heres an easy option. Just set your list option then set its text as selected value:

$("#ddlScheduleFrequency option").selected(text("Select One..."));
0
votes

Very fiddly and nothing else seemed to work

$('select[name$="dropdown"]').children().text("Mr").prop("selected", true);

worked for me.

0
votes

Try

[...mySelect.options].forEach(o=> o.selected = o.text == 'Text C' )

[...mySelect.options].forEach(o=> o.selected = o.text == 'Text C' );
<select id="mySelect">
  <option value="A">Text A</option>
  <option value="B">Text B</option>
  <option value="C">Text C</option>
</select>
0
votes

If you are trying to bind select with ID then the following code worked for me.

<select name="0product_id[]" class="groupSelect" id="groupsel_0" onchange="productbuilder.update(this.value,0);">
    <option value="0" class="notag" id="id0_0">--Select--</option>
    <option class="notag" value="338" id="id0_338"  >Dual Promoter Puromycin Expression Plasmid - pSF-CMV-PGK-Puro  > £114.00</option>
    <option class="notag" value="282" id="id0_282"  >EMCV IRES Puromycin Expression Plasmid - pSF-CMV-EMCV-Puro  > £114.00</option>
    <option class="notag" value="265" id="id0_265"  >FMDV IRES Puromycin Expression Plasmid - pSF-CMV-FMDV-Puro  > £114.00</option>
    <option class="notag" value="101" id="id0_101"  >Puromycin Selection Plasmid - pSF-CMV-Ub-Puro AscI  > £114.00</option>
    <option class="notag" value="105" id="id0_105"  >Puromycin Selection SV40 Ori Plasmid - pSF-CMV-Ub-Puro-SV40 Ori SbfI  > £114.00</option></select>

AND THIS IS TEH JS CODE

$( document ).ready(function() {
      var text = "EMCV IRES Puromycin Expression Plasmid - pSF-CMV-EMCV-Puro  > £114.00";
      alert(text);
$("#groupsel_0 option").filter(function() {
  //may want to use $.trim in here
  return $(this).text() == text;
}).prop('selected', true);
});
-1
votes

Get the children of the select box; loop through them; when you have found the one you want, set it as the selected option; return false to stop looping.