well, I am more of a PHP person, and my JS skills are close to none when it comes to any JS other than simple design related operations , so excuse me if I am asking the obvious .
the following operations would be a breeze in PHP (and might also be in JS - but I am fighting with unfamiliar syntax here ...)
It is some sort of input validation
var ar = ["BRS201103-0783-CT-S", "MAGIC WORD", "magic", "Words", "Magic-Word"];
jQuery(document).ready(function() {
jQuery("form#searchreport").submit(function() {
if (jQuery.inArray(jQuery("input:first").val(), ar) != -1){
jQuery("#contentresults").delay(800).show("slow");
return false;
}
This question has 2 parts .
- 1 - how can I make it possible for the array to be case insensitive ?
E.g. - BRS201103-0783-CT-S
will give the same result as brs201103-0783-ct-s
AND Brs201103-0783-CT-s
or MAGIC magic Magic MaGIc
basically i need something like ignoreCase() for array , but I could not find any reference to that in jQuery nor JS...
I tried toLowerCase()
- but It is not working on the array (ittirating??) and also, would it resolve the mixed case ?
- 2 - How can I make the function to recognize only parts or combinations of the elements ?
E.g. - if one types only "word"
, I would like it to pass as "words"
, and also if someone types "some word"
it should pass (containing "word" )
Part 1
You can process your array to be entirely lowercase, and lowercase your input so
indexOf()
will work like it's performing a case insensitive search.You can lowercase a string with
toLowerCase()
as you've already figured out.To do an array, you can use...
Part 2
You could check for a substring, for example...
Alternatively, you could skip in this instance transforming the array to be all lowercase by calling
toLowerCase()
on eachelem
before you checkindexOf()
.some()
andmap()
aren't supported in older IEs, but are trivial to polyfill. An example of a polyfill for each is available at the linked documentation.As Fabrício Matté also pointed out, you can use the jQuery equivalents here,
$.map()
forArray.prototype.map()
and$.grep()
withlength
property forArray.prototype.some()
. Then you will get the browser compatibility for free.To check if an array contains an element, case-insensitive, I used this code:
Here is a fiddle to play with array match case insensitive