This doesn't work:
$("#elementId").attr("required", "true");
In both Chrome and Firefox, the DOM produces either required
as the attribute (no value) or required=""
(empty value).
And it doesn't matter that the value in this example is "true". If you try "asdf" the same thing happens.
What's odd is that I believe this used to work because this new code is part of a large project that's been ongoing for several years.
The only thing I can think of is that my Chrome (v10) and Firefox (v4) are now both sufficiently advanced that they're recognizing the required attribute as an HTML5 reserved keyword. I added the novalidate attribute, thinking that that might turn off any form-related HTML5-ness. No such luck.
Thoughts?
Edit:
To clarify, this only happens with JQuery. If I say this, it works:
$("#elementId")[0].setAttribute("required", "true");
Is there a bug in JQuery? Any idea why this only happens with JQuery? Our development team likes all code to go through JQuery where possible. I can use the straight setAttribute JavaScript method, but would rather use a JQuery solution that works.
Edit 2:
The crux of the matter is this...
Why does using JQuery's attr()
method not work when the regular setAttribute()
method does? Doesn't the attr()
method call setAttribute()
at some point lower down?
That is what is so confusing. Chrome and Firefox are perfectly fine setting required="true"
if you use setAttribute().
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