class method Form.Element.getValue
Form.Element.getValue(element) → String | Array
Returns the current value of a form control.
A string is returned for most controls; only multiple select
boxes
return an array of values.
The global shortcut for this method is $F
.
How to reference form controls by their name
This method is consistent with other DOM extensions in that it requires an element ID as the string argument, not the name of the form control (as some might think). If you want to reference controls by their names, first find the control the regular JavaScript way and use the node itself instead of an ID as the argument.
For example, if you have an input
named "company" in a form
with an
ID "contact":
var form = $('contact'); var input = form['company']; Form.Element.getValue(input); // but, the preferred call is: $(input).getValue(); // we used the $() method so the node gets extended // you can also use the shortcut $F(input);
Note
An error is thrown ("element has no properties") if the element
argument
is an unknown ID.
Alias of: $F
This method can be called either as an instance method or as a generic method. If calling as a generic, pass the instance in as the first argument.