A set of radio buttons on an HTML form. A set of radio buttons lets the user choose one item from a list.
To define a set of radio buttons, use standard HTML syntax with the addition of the onClick event handler:
<INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="radioName" VALUE="buttonValue" [CHECKED] [onClick="handlerText"]> textToDisplayNAME="radioName" specifies the name of the radio object. All radio buttons in a group have the same NAME attribute. You can access this value using the name property.
To use a radio button's properties and methods:
1. radioName[index1].propertyName 2. radioName[index1].methodName(parameters) 3. formName.elements[index2].propertyName 4. formName.elements[index2].methodName(parameters)radioName is the value of the NAME attribute of a radio object.
A radio object on a form looks as follows:
A radio object is a form element and must be defined within a <FORM> tag.
All radio buttons in a radio button group use the same name property. To access the individual radio buttons in your code, follow the object name with an index starting from zero, one for each button the same way you would for an array such as forms: document.forms[0].radioName[0] is the first, document.forms[0].radioName[1] is the second, etc.
Example 1. The following example defines a radio button group to choose among three music catalogs. Each radio button is given the same name, NAME="musicChoice", forming a group of buttons for which only one choice can be selected. The example also defines a text field that defaults to what was chosen via the radio buttons but that allows the user to type a nonstandard catalog name as well. The onClick event handler sets the catalog name input field when the user clicks a radio button.
Example 2. The following example contains a form with three text boxes and three radio buttons. The radio buttons let the user choose whether the text fields are converted to upper case or lower case, or not converted at all. Each text field has an onChange event handler that converts the field value depending on which radio button is checked. The radio buttons for upper case and lower case have onClick event handlers that convert all fields when the user clicks the radio button.
See also the example for the link object.
Returns a pseudo-random number between zero and one. This method is available on Unix platforms only.
Math.random()
//Displays a random number between 0 and 1 document.write("The random number is " + Math.random())
Specifies the URL of the calling document when a user clicks a link.
document.referrer
When a user navigates to a destination document by clicking a link object on a source document, the referrer property contains the URL of the source document. Evaluate the referrer property from the destination document.
referrer is a read-only property.
In the following example, the getReferrer() function is called from the destination document. It returns the URL of the source document.
function getReferrer() { return document.referrer }
A reset button on an HTML form. A reset button resets all elements in a form to their defaults.
To define a reset button, use standard HTML syntax with the addition of the onClick event handler:
<INPUT TYPE="reset" NAME="resetName" VALUE="buttonText" [onClick="handlerText"]>NAME="resetName" specifies the name of the reset object. You can access this value using the name property.
To use a reset object's properties and methods:
1. resetName.propertyName 2. resetName.methodName(parameters) 3. formName.elements[index].propertyName 4. formName.elements[index].methodName(parameters)resetName is the value of the NAME attribute of a reset object.
A reset object on a form looks as follows:
A reset object is a form element and must be defined within a <FORM> tag.
The reset button's onClick event handler cannot prevent a form from being reset; once the button is clicked, the reset cannot be canceled.
Example 1. The following example displays a text object with the default value "CA" and a reset button with the text "Clear Form" displayed on its face. If the user types a state abbreviation in the text object and then clicks the Clear Form button, the original value of "CA" is restored.
Example 2. The following example displays two text objects, a select object, and three radio buttons; all of these objects have default values. The form also has a reset button with the text "Defaults" on its face. If the user changes the value of any of the objects and then clicks the Defaults button, the original values are restored.
Returns the value of a number rounded to the nearest integer.
Math.round(number)number is any numeric expression or a property of an existing object.
If the fractional portion of number is .5 or greater, the argument is rounded to the next highest integer. If the fractional portion of number is less than .5, the argument is rounded to the next lowest integer.
//Displays the value 20 document.write("The rounded value is " + Math.round(20.49)) //Displays the value 21 document.write("<P>The rounded value is " + Math.round(20.5)) //Displays the value -20 document.write("<P>The rounded value is " + Math.round(-20.5)) //Displays the value -21 document.write("<P>The rounded value is " + Math.round(-20.51))