I have a form that i wish the entered fields to be emailed to 2 addresses; my address (bcc) and the email address that the user has entered in the email field on the form. Before you say it, I know that 'mailto' is not a recommended method but it the only one I can use (due to restrictions at work). Below is the code I am using but it doesn't seem to like [document.forms.request.email.value]. I know it works (including the validation) when I just enter an email address in the code but it doesn't using the email form field.
I have a div that contains simple text data with line breaks. I want to append a mailto link to the email address but so far I have not been able to select the email.
The container looks something like this:
My first intention was to use a filter like:
But I found out that I couldn't apply it since the container had no children. So I used a function first to wrap the elements into span tags and then applied 'find':
I am trying to create a script for checking that checks that the email address entered into two input boxes is the same when a submit button is clicked, I have these two input boxes <input type="text" name="user_email" id="user_email" /> <input type="text" name="user_email2" id="user_email2" />
This javascript code <script type="text/javascript"> var email1 = document.getElementById(user_email); var email2 = document.getElementById(user_email2); function checkEmail(){ if (email1 != email2){ alert("The two email addresses are not the same"); }} </script>
And this code for the button <input type="submit" name="submit" id="submit" onSubmit="checkEmail" /> However this code is not working.
I should imagine others here have experienced it. The user completes your form, and they unintentionally input their email address incorrectly. Then when you reply to their form, you then get the mailer daemon returning your email! Now, there's a couple of ways that some websites try to solve this problem - some ask the user to input their email address twice, some show the forms results on the next page, so that the user has a last chance to check, before completing the submission. Are there any other ways of trying to ensure that, as much as possible, that the user inputs the correct email address?
I found this forum while running out of ideas and being extremely desperate to fixing a probably small javascript error in a script. the script is supposed to open a small form window that allows the user to input an email address and update it to proceed. the form item is initially unchecked, but as the user clicks it and enter his email address, it updates the value of the email address and the box becomes "checkable". the problem is that with both IE and firefox, the box doesn't close again, doesn't get checkable and basically doesn't work. in the firefox debugging console, I found the following error:
Quote:
The part responsible in the javascript for this section is:
Quote:
And the html code that is supposed to pop up the box is:
I have a requirement to send an Email thru Javascript in HTML format. PFA Attached sample EMail HTML. Requirements are
* Make sure we use Times NEw Roman size 10 font for the message text * Make sure we BOLD the text value..
I know it's achievable only thru some HTML identifying logic or use of some HTML tags inside javascript like document.write etc..but even after trying my best available options i couldnt achieve the same..
I am pasting a sample EMail HTML, and if you can edit it n send to me back with sample code how to send EMail in HTML format using Javasscript, it would be of immense help
If its not feasible, plz also reply back so that I could go back to Customer and tell that its not feasible. Code:
Im using the old nopcard scripts on my site. It does every thing right except it does not send a Email to my to my email adres. I dont know how to correct this because i dont know Javascript. I include the script if anybody know how to alter it so that it will send the info to my email adres as well.
Is it possible to create a page (with javascipt) that will send an email to the "me" but the user can't see the destination email address? Im wondering if I can do the "party" with Javascript without using some server page like PHP.
I have a web app which allows users to select multiple items from a select tag. I then call a JS function on submit which collects all the options they've selected and then adds them to the value attribute of a hidden input. The options selected are then used at a later time. This works fine on IE and Firefox, but both Chrome and Safari for not adding the selected values to the value attribute of the hidden input. Are there any JS issues for Chrome and Safari that could be responsible for this?
Heres my javascript code that will verify email from email input field and check if the checkbox (I agree condition) was checked:
[Code]....
However, this will work fine when calling with a link "javascript:validate('inputForm');" but if I try to prevent users by submitting form with pressing enter I put it in form onSubmit parameter: <form .. onSubmit="javascript:validate('inputForm');"> which will check the forms and submit data (do return) no matter if it matched or no.
In a FrontPage web I'm trying to validate an email address to be sure it meets some minimum format, perhaps something like ?@?.* I was told that this could be done in javascript. Any help would be very much appreciated.
<script type="text/javascript"> var a,b,c,d; a = "x"; c = "kungfu"; b = "y"; d = "com"; document.write("<a href='mailto:" + a+b+"@"+c+"."+d+"'>eMail</a"); </script>
a safe way of hiding email address from spam bots? Or will they know javascript and produce the xy@kungfu.com ??
I need to extract just the domain from an entered email address. So for example, if a user entered 'myname@somedomain.com' I would like to return 'somedomain.com'
I'm a bit of a JS newb, and can't quite get a grip on the regular expressions thing... can someone help me out please?
I am trying to prevent an email address from being spammed as spammers use spidering tools to scan the internet for exposed email addresses in plain text.
I am using a technique and I'm not sure whether it will deter spam bots.
I have an external Javascript file with the following variables:
var usr = "mark"; var at = "@"; var domain = "fullmarksdrivingschool.co.uk";
[Code].....
When I open the web page in a browser the email address displays correctly but does this technique work to prevent spammers from indexing the email address?
Trying to make a 2 page application. First is an introduction page and second is the content. Ive put a pop up box in the head of the second page and it asks for email, but how do i make it so if the email is incorrect it will not go onto the second page? at present if i click the link for the second page the box pops up but that is it. I can document.write their response and it comes on the top of the second page, but i want it validated!
what is the javascript validation for the email address like php.ycho@gmail.com
i used the simple validation like "^w{1,}@w{1,}(.w{1,}){1,}$"
which works well for php@gmail.com but doesnot work for php.ycho@gmail.com can anybody make a modification to above pattern to work for php.ycho@gmail.com
My company has 2 email apps. One for external (MS Outlook) and one for internal (GroupWise). On my Intranet, I need to connect the mailto tags to the internal system. Does anyone know how to do this? I can't make GroupWise everyone's default email program because many people use both frequently. I would greatly appreciate any help or direction.
I need a simple js function that will check if the value (an email address) in two text fields match.
If someone enters creole@creole.com in "fieldOne" and creoel@creole.com in field two it would throw an error. If they matched, the form would submit silently.
Can someone help me out? I think it should be easy, and I'm trying to do it myself, I'm just not good enough at js.
I'm using this to try to validate a small subset of the valid e-mail addresses allowed by the relevant RFC (alphanumerics, underscores, and dashes). I've tested it and it seems to work....
I'm hiding the email address on a website with this javascript which works fine: --------------------------------- <p>Send your comments and questions to our <script language=javascript> <!-- var contact = "Newsletter Editor" var email = "news" var emailHost = "netmechanic.com" document.write("<a href=" + "mail" + "to:" + email + "@" + emailHost+">" + contact + "</a>" + ".") //--> </script> </p> --------------------------------- How can I make an image instead of the text as a link to start thisscript?
I'm creating a form that will only allow user with specific at email addresses to be able to submit the form. For instance, these are preferred customers from say a company called Sanderson. Michael may have the email michael@sanderson.com. I want to make sure that my form only excepts emails from this company; only specific @sanderson.com email addressesHow can I do that?Right now I'm trying to use: