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Home/ Questions/Q 921739
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T18:54:48+00:00 2026-05-15T18:54:48+00:00

The idea: I’m setting the value of an input with type=hidden via regular Javascript

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The idea: I’m setting the value of an input with type=”hidden” via regular Javascript or jQuery.

The issue: neither jQuery nor document.getElementById will find the hidden input, even though I’m absolutely sure the selector is correct and there are no conflicting elements.

The code:
I can’t really post much of it, because it’s full of rather complicated PHP that confuses me when I just look at it.

Here’s the javascript:

$("#" + input.id.substr(0,2) + "_budget_hidden").val(budg_total);

Note: there’s nothing wrong with the selector, and the “input” is a different element that I’m using to reference the hidden.

Here’s the HTML:

<input type="hidden" name="s<?=$step_counter?>_budget_hidden" 
       id="s<?=$step_counter?>_budget_hidden" value="0" />

The code is kind of out of context, but it’s more of a general problem with Javascript than a syntactical error. Thoughts?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T18:54:49+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 6:54 pm

    In $("#" + input.id.substr(0,2) + "_budget_hidden").val(budg_total); you take two chars before the first underscore in your hidden id. However your hidden id have only one char ‘s’

    EDIT

    Ok the <?= ?> was hidden before the question edit.

    Do you call your script after the body onload event?
    EX:

    $(document).ready(function(){
        $("#" + input.id.substr(0,2) + "_budget_hidden").bind("keyPressed",function(){
            $("#" + input.id.substr(0,2) + "_budget_hidden").val(budg_total);
         }
    });
    
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