That was it! It looks so simple. Thanks, Jörn. I just received John Resig's Pro JS Techniques book, and plan on going over this oop style js stuff and studying your examples, now that the heat will be off.
Many thanks again. On May 3, 12:24 pm, Jörn Zaefferer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Jeff Fleitz schrieb:> I thought I had it working, but I don't, I am still > having issues. I > > have two lookups on the same form, and the data is returned fine. > > data[0] is the text description and data[1] is the primary key of the > > lookup table. I am trying to pass the values to some hidden fields. > > I am using the code block you gave me, and it works with one call, but > > not two. Why doesn't the following work? The ignore1 value gets > > populated every time, but the ignore2 value never gets populated for > > some reason. > > > $("#unitname").result(function(event, data, formatted) { > > $("#ignore1").value = $(this).next().val(data[0]); > > $("#ignore2").value = $(this).next().val(data[1]); > > }); > > That doesn't make much sense. It looks like you really want to do simply > this: > > $("#unitname").result(function(event, data, formatted) { > $("#ignore1").val(data[0]); > $("#ignore2").val(data[1]); > > }); > > Or just this: > > $("#unitname").result(function(event, data, formatted) { > $(this).next().val(data[0]).next().val(data[1]); > > }); > > Depends on your form layout.> I have all this working using Dan Switzer's > implementation and a combo > > of procedural js and jquery syntax, but i am trying to get it work > > here to, using all jquery stuff, so that we are onboard when this > > plugin becomes the primary implementation. > > Let me know if that doesn't work yet. It always helps a lot to take a > look at an example page. If necessary, try to extract the interesting > parts from your application. I'm sure we can figure it out. > > -- > Jörn Zaefferer > > http://bassistance.de