81
votes

This gets the value of whatever is selected in my dropdown menu.

document.getElementById('newSkill').value

I cannot however find out what property to go after for the text that's currently displayed by the drop down menu. I tried "text" then looked at W3Schools but that didn't have the answer, does anybody here know?

For those not sure, here's the HTML for a drop down box.

<select name="newSkill" id="newSkill">
    <option value="1">A skill</option>
    <option value="2">Another skill</option>
    <option value="3">Yet another skill</option>
</select>
13

13 Answers

141
votes

Based on your example HTML code, here's one way to get the displayed text of the currently selected option:

var skillsSelect = document.getElementById("newSkill");
var selectedText = skillsSelect.options[skillsSelect.selectedIndex].text;
17
votes

Simply You can use Jquery instead of Javascript

$("#yourdropdownid option:selected").text();

Try This.

8
votes

This should return the text value of the selected value

var vSkill = document.getElementById('newSkill');

var vSkillText = vSkill.options[vSkill.selectedIndex].innerHTML;

alert(vSkillText);

Props: @Tanerax for reading the question, knowing what was asked and answering it before others figured it out.

Edit: DownModed, cause I actually read a question fully, and answered it, sad world it is.

7
votes
document.getElementById('newSkill').options[document.getElementById('newSkill').selectedIndex].value 

Should work

4
votes

This works i tried it my self i thought i post it here in case someone need it...

document.getElementById("newSkill").options[document.getElementById('newSkill').selectedIndex].text;
2
votes

Attaches a change event to the select that gets the text for each selected option and writes them in the div.

You can use jQuery it very face and successful and easy to use

<select name="sweets" multiple="multiple">
  <option>Chocolate</option>
  <option>Candy</option>
  <option>Taffy</option>
  <option selected="selected">Caramel</option>
  <option>Fudge</option>
  <option>Cookie</option>
</select>
<div></div>


$("select").change(function () {
  var str = "";

  $("select option:selected").each(function() {
    str += $( this ).text() + " ";
  });

  $( "div" ).text( str );
}).change();
2
votes
function getValue(obj)
{  
   // it will return the selected text
   // obj variable will contain the object of check box
   var text = obj.options[obj.selectedIndex].innerHTML ; 

}

HTML Snippet

 <asp:DropDownList ID="ddl" runat="server" CssClass="ComboXXX" 
  onchange="getValue(this)">
</asp:DropDownList>
1
votes

Does this get the correct answer?

document.getElementById("newSkill").innerHTML
0
votes
    var ele = document.getElementById('newSkill')
    ele.onchange = function(){
            var length = ele.children.length
            for(var i=0; i<length;i++){
                if(ele.children[i].selected){alert(ele.children[i].text)};              
            }
    }   
0
votes
var selectoption = document.getElementById("dropdown");
var optionText = selectoption.options[selectoption.selectedIndex].text;
0
votes

Please try the below this is the easiest way and it works perfectly

var newSkill_Text = document.getElementById("newSkill")[document.getElementById("newSkill").selectedIndex];
0
votes

Here is an easy and short method

document.getElementById('elementID').selectedOptions[0].innerHTML
0
votes

Found this a tricky question but using ideas from here I eventually got the solution using PHP & Mysqli to populate the list : and then a bit of javascript to get the working variable out.

        <select  id="mfrbtn" onchange="changemfr()" >   
        <option selected="selected">Choose one</option>
            <?php
            foreach($rows as $row)
                {
                echo '<option   value=implode($rows)>'.$row["Mfrname"].'</option>';
                 }
              ?>
          </select>

Then :

<script language="JavaScript">
    
    function changemfr()
    {
     var $mfr2=document.getElementById("mfrbtn").selectedOptions[0].text;
     alert($mfr2);
    }
</script>