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Home/ Questions/Q 7089191
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 28, 20262026-05-28T07:53:30+00:00 2026-05-28T07:53:30+00:00

I’ve got the following (partial) code: $(#input1, #input2).autocomplete({ source:function( request, response ) { …

  • 0

I’ve got the following (partial) code:

$("#input1, #input2").autocomplete({
   source:function( request, response ) { 
     ...
   }, ...);

Ok, I want to know how can I know which is the selector active, input1 or input2, inside the source option. I’ve tried with $(this).attr(“id”), but it throws undefined.

Edition: in the “select:” option, $(this).attr(“id”) works fine.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-28T07:53:31+00:00Added an answer on May 28, 2026 at 7:53 am

    As you’re using the jQuery UI autocompleter, you can get the element from the undocumented element property on the autocompleter instance:

    source: function(request, response) {
      if (this.element && this.element[0]) {
        display("source triggered for #" + this.element[0].id);
      }
    }
    

    Live example

    this.element is a jQuery wrapper for the element the autocompleter is attached to, so this.element[0] is the raw DOM element.

    But using undocumented information is always risky, it can change or go away between dot releases. It would be more reliable to use a closure as suggested by SadullahCeran. I’d do it slightly differently:

    $("#input1, #input2").each(function(){
      var $element = $(this); // `element` is a jQuery wrapper around the element
      $(element).autocomplete({
       source:function( request, response ) { 
         // get the options relevant to `element`
       });
    });
    

    …just because then you’re not relying on using an id value. But that’s a small point. And yes, the above does end up creating two function objects, but that’s not such a bad thing. If there’s a lot of code involved and you’re worried about having two copies of it in memory (which is almost certainly not an issue), just have the function call into another function:

    $("#input1, #input2").each(function(){
      var $element = $(this); // `element` is a jQuery wrapper around the element
      $(element).autocomplete({
       source:function( request, response ) { 
         return getOptionsFor(element, request, response);
       });
    });
    function getOptionsFor(element, request, response) {
      // get the options for `element`
    }
    
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