How can I set the default value for an HTML <select> element?

Asked 2023-09-21 08:07:51 View 541,798

I thought that adding a "value" attribute set on the <select> element below would cause the <option> containing my provided "value" to be selected by default:

<select name="hall" id="hall" value="3">
  <option>1</option>
  <option>2</option>
  <option>3</option>
  <option>4</option>
  <option>5</option>
</select>

However, this did not work as I had expected. How can I set which <option> element is selected by default?

  • I just posted an answer that enables to dynamically change the defaults, it also covers the multiple selection. And it works in Reactjs. It does what you want and a lot more. Hope it helps sombody. - anyone

Answers

Set selected="selected" for the option you want to be the default.

<option selected="selected">
3
</option>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

  • If you're using Angular, note that ng-model overrides the the default selected value (even as undefined if you did not set the bound object). Took me a while to figure that was why the selected="selected" option was not selected. - anyone
  • You don't need the ="selected" part. All you need is <option selected>. HTML option selected Attribute (w3schools) - anyone
  • If you are using React, React reports a warming when you use select: VM71 react_devtools_backend.js:3973 Warning: Use the defaultValue` or value props on <select> instead of setting selected on <option>`. Also using this method makes it cumbersome to change the defaults to what the user already has in the database to present to her, the last state selected as a default. So I added another answer showing how to do this in React and that it also applies to vanilla javascript. It is at the end.... Hope it helps. - anyone

In case you want to have a default text as a sort of placeholder/hint but not considered a valid value (something like "complete here", "select your nation" ecc.) you can do something like this:

<select>
  <option value="" selected disabled hidden>Choose here</option>
  <option value="1">One</option>
  <option value="2">Two</option>
  <option value="3">Three</option>
  <option value="4">Four</option>
  <option value="5">Five</option>
</select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

  • I would think this is what most people are looking for. Good answer. - anyone
  • It doesn't work in my case, I want a default value to the first option. - anyone
  • Thanks for adding the available attributes. After figuring out how to solve the basic solution of this problem, you're left with the selected option being the first option, so by adding the "hidden" attribute you hide that first option - anyone
  • this is a very good example. of course you'd need a nullable field or some form of validation - anyone

Complete example:

<select name="hall" id="hall"> 
  <option>1</option> 
  <option>2</option> 
  <option selected>3</option> 
  <option>4</option> 
  <option>5</option> 
</select> 

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

  • That's simpler than use selected="selected". - anyone
  • selected="selected" should work for all doctypes. XHTML doesn't like attributes without values. - anyone
  • @DanielParejoMuñoz, ok, it's negligible. But if my doctype is html, and not xhtml, why waste any byte at all? - anyone
  • For Sharepoint Web Parts you need to use selected="selected" - anyone
  • I have a select box in angular and no matter what I do it refuses to show "choose here" in the select box. - anyone

I came across this question, but the accepted and highly upvoted answer didn't work for me. It turns out that if you are using React, then setting selected doesn't work.

Instead you have to set a value in the <select> tag directly as shown below:

<select value="B">
  <option value="A">Apple</option>
  <option value="B">Banana</option>
  <option value="C">Cranberry</option>
</select>

Read more about why here on the React page.

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

You can do it like this:

<select name="hall" id="hall">
    <option> 1 </option>
    <option> 2 </option>
    <option selected> 3 </option>
    <option> 4 </option>
    <option> 5 </option>
</select> 

Provide "selected" keyword inside the option tag, which you want to appear by default in your drop down list.

Or you can also provide attribute to the option tag i.e.

<option selected="selected">3</option>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

  • @JRM I think what you mean is that if for your document to be XHTML compliant than an attribute must have a a value. In HTML there is no need for "selected=selected". The examples on w3.org/wiki/HTML/Elements/select, developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/HTML/Element/select do not specify a value. The important thing to note is that selected="false" is not allowed and selected="" also makes it selected. The only way to make an options not selected is to remove the attribute. w3.org/html/wg/drafts/html/master/… - anyone
  • @Juan Mendes selected set null seems also work at least by d3 style. const options = select .selectAll('option') .attr('selected',function (d) { return d===config.name?true:null; }); - anyone

if you want to use the values from a Form and keep it dynamic try this with php

<form action="../<SamePage>/" method="post">


<?php
    $selected = $_POST['select'];
?>

<select name="select" size="1">

  <option <?php if($selected == '1'){echo("selected");}?>>1</option>
  <option <?php if($selected == '2'){echo("selected");}?>>2</option>

</select>
</form>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

Best way in my opinion:

<select>
   <option value="" selected="selected" hidden="hidden">Choose here</option>
   <option value="1">One</option>
   <option value="2">Two</option>
   <option value="3">Three</option>
   <option value="4">Four</option>
   <option value="5">Five</option>
</select>

Why not disabled?

When you use disabled attribute together with <button type="reset">Reset</button> value is not reset to original placeholder. Instead browser choose first not disabled option which may cause user mistakes.

Default empty value

Every production form has validation, then empty value should not be a problem. This way we may have empty not required select.

XHTML syntax attributes

selected="selected" syntax is the only way to be compatible with both XHTML and HTML 5. It is correct XML syntax and some editors may be happy about this. It is more backward compatible. If XML compliance is important you should follow the full syntax.

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

I prefer this:

<select>
   <option selected hidden>Choose here</option>
   <option value="1">One</option>
   <option value="2">Two</option>
   <option value="3">Three</option>
   <option value="4">Four</option>
   <option value="5">Five</option>
</select>

'Choose here' disappears after an option has been selected.

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

An improvement for nobita's answer. Also you can improve the visual view of the drop down list, by hiding the element 'Choose here'.

<select>
  <option selected disabled hidden>Choose here</option>
  <option value="1">One</option>
  <option value="2">Two</option>
  <option value="3">Three</option>
  <option value="4">Four</option>
  <option value="5">Five</option>
</select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

Another example; using JavaScript to set a selected option.

(You could use this example to for loop an array of values into a drop down component)

<select id="yourDropDownElementId"><select/>

// Get the select element
var select = document.getElementById("yourDropDownElementId");
// Create a new option element
var el = document.createElement("option");
// Add our value to the option
el.textContent = "Example Value";
el.value = "Example Value";
// Set the option to selected
el.selected = true;
// Add the new option element to the select element
select.appendChild(el);

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

The selected attribute is a boolean attribute.

When present, it specifies that an option should be pre-selected when the page loads.

The pre-selected option will be displayed first in the drop-down list.

<select>
  <option value="volvo">Volvo</option>
 <option value="saab">Saab</option>
 <option value="vw">VW</option>
 <option value="audi" selected>Audi</option> 
</select> 

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

If you are in react you can use defaultValue as attribute instead of value in the select tag.

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

If you are using select with angular 1, then you need to use ng-init, otherwise, second option will not be selected since, ng-model overrides the defaul selected value

<select ng-model="sortVar" ng-init='sortVar="stargazers_count"'>
  <option value="name">Name</option>
  <option selected="selected" value="stargazers_count">Stars</option>
  <option value="language">Language</option>
</select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

I would just simply make the first select option value the default and just hide that value in the dropdown with HTML5's new "hidden" feature. Like this:

   <select name="" id="">
     <option hidden value="default">Select An Option</option>
     <option value="1">One</option>
     <option value="2">Two</option>
     <option value="3">Three</option>
     <option value="4">Four</option>
   </select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

value attribute of tag is missing, so it doesn't show as u desired selected. By default first option show on dropdown page load, if value attribute is set on tag.... I got solved my problem this way

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

This example has been tested to work with multiple <select> elements on the page, and can also work with normal text elements. It has not been tested for setting the value to more than one selection when <select multiple="true">, however you can probably modify this sample to support that.

  • Add an attribute data-selected to each <select> element and set the value(s) to the value of the option you wish to have selected.

  • Use javascript's querySelectorAll() to select all elements that have the custom attribute you just added.

In the following example, when run, the first <select> should show option with the value user as selected, and the second <select> should show the option with the value admin as selected.

document.querySelectorAll('[data-selected]').forEach(e => {
   e.value = e.dataset.selected
});
<select data-selected="user" class="form-control" name="role">
    <option value="public">
        Pubblica
    </option>
    <option value="user">
        Utenti
    </option>
    <option value="admin">
        Admin
    </option>
</select>


<select data-selected="admin" class="form-control" name="role2">
    <option value="public">
        Pubblica
    </option>
    <option value="user">
        Utenti
    </option>
    <option value="admin">
        Admin
    </option>
</select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

I used this php function to generate the options, and insert it into my HTML

<?php
  # code to output a set of options for a numeric drop down list
  # parameters: (start, end, step, format, default)
  function numericoptions($start, $end, $step, $formatstring, $default)
  {
    $retstring = "";
    for($i = $start; $i <= $end; $i = $i + $step)
    {
      $retstring = $retstring . '<OPTION ';
      $retstring = $retstring . 'value="' . sprintf($formatstring,$i) . '"';
      if($default == $i)
      {
        $retstring = $retstring . ' selected="selected"';
      }
      $retstring = $retstring . '>' . sprintf($formatstring,$i) . '</OPTION> ';
    }

  return $retstring;
  }

?>

And then in my webpage code I use it as below;

<select id="endmin" name="endmin">
  <?php echo numericoptions(0,55,5,'%02d',$endmin); ?>
</select>

If $endmin is created from a _POST variable every time the page is loaded (and this code is inside a form which posts) then the previously selected value is selected by default.

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

This code sets the default value for the HTML select element with PHP.

<select name="hall" id="hall">
<?php
    $default = 3;
    $nr = 1;
    while($nr < 10){
        if($nr == $default){
            echo "<option selected=\"selected\">". $nr ."</option>";
        }
        else{
            echo "<option>". $nr ."</option>";
        }
        $nr++;
    }
?>
</select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

You can use:

<option value="someValue" selected>Some Value</option>

instead of,

<option value="someValue" selected = "selected">Some Value</option>

both are equally correct.

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

Set selected="selected" where is option value is 3

please see below example

<option selected="selected" value="3" >3</option>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

I myself use it

<select selected=''>
    <option value=''></option>
    <option value='1'>ccc</option>
    <option value='2'>xxx</option>
    <option value='3'>zzz</option>
    <option value='4'>aaa</option>
    <option value='5'>qqq</option>
    <option value='6'>wwww</option>
</select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

You just need to put attribute "selected" on a particular option instead direct to select element.

Here is snippet for same and multiple working example with different values.

   Select Option 3 :- 
   <select name="hall" id="hall">
    <option>1</option>
    <option>2</option>
    <option selected="selected">3</option>
    <option>4</option>
    <option>5</option>
   </select>
   
   <br/>
   <br/>
   <br/>
   Select Option 5 :- 
   <select name="hall" id="hall">
    <option>1</option>
    <option>2</option>
    <option>3</option>
    <option>4</option>
    <option selected="selected">5</option>
   </select>
   
    <br/>
   <br/>
   <br/>
   Select Option 2 :- 
   <select name="hall" id="hall">
    <option>1</option>
    <option selected="selected">2</option>
    <option>3</option>
    <option>4</option>
    <option>5</option>
   </select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

Default selected value is Option-4

  <html:select property="status" value="OPTION_4" styleClass="form-control">
            <html:option value="">Select</html:option>
            <html:option value="OPTION_1"  >Option-1</html:option>
            <html:option value="OPTION_2"  >Option-2</html:option>
            <html:option value="OPTION_3"  >Option-3</html:option>
            <html:option value="OPTION_4"  >Option-4</html:option>
            <html:option value="OPTION_5"  >Option-5</html:option>                                  
   </html:select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

You will need an "id" attribute in each option for this solution to work:

<script>
function select_option (id,value_selected) {

 var select; 
 select = document.getElementById(id);
 if (select == null) return 0;
 
 var option;
 option = select.options.namedItem(value_selected);
 if (option == null) return 0;

 option.selected = "selected";
 return true;
} 
</script>

<select name="hall" id="hall">
  <option id="1">1</option>
  <option id="2">2</option>
  <option id="3">3</option>
  <option id="4">4</option>
  <option id="5">5</option>
</select>
<script>select_option ("hall","3");</script> 

The function first tries to find the <select> with the id, then it will search for the value_selected in the <select> options and if it finds it, it will set the selected attribute returning true. False otherwise

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

The problem with <select> is, it's sometimes disconnected with the state of what's currently rendered and unless something has changed in the option list, no change value is returned. This can be a problem when trying to select the first option from a list. The following code can get the first-option the first-time selected, but onchange="changeFontSize(this)" by its self would not. There are methods described above using a dummy option to force a user to make a change value to pickup the actual first value, such as starting the list with an empty value. Note: onclick would call the function twice, the following code does not, but solves the first-time problem.

<label>Font Size</label>
<select name="fontSize" id="fontSize" onfocus="changeFontSize(this)" onchange="changeFontSize(this)">           
    <option value="small">Small</option>
    <option value="medium">Medium</option>
    <option value="large">Large</option>
    <option value="extraLarge">Extra large</option>
</select>

<script>
function changeFontSize(x){
    body=document.getElementById('body');
    if (x.value=="extraLarge") {
        body.style.fontSize="25px";
    } else {
        body.style.fontSize=x.value;
    }
}
</script>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

I use Angular and i set the default option by

HTML Template

<select #selectConnection [(ngModel)]="selectedVal" class="form-control  col-sm-6 "  max-width="100px"   title="Select" 
      data-size="10"> 
        <option  >test1</option>
        <option >test2</option>      
      </select>

Script:

sselectedVal:any="test1";

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

You can try like this

  <select name="hall" id="hall">
      <option>1</option>
      <option>2</option>
      <option selected="selected">3</option>
      <option>4</option>
      <option>5</option>
    </select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

To set the default using PHP and JavaScript:

State: <select id="State">
<option value="" selected disabled hidden></option>
<option value="Andhra Pradesh">Andhra Pradesh</option>
<option value="Andaman and Nicobar Islands">Andaman and Nicobar Islands</option>
.
.
<option value="West Bengal">West Bengal</option>
</select>
<?php
if(isset($_GET['State'])){
    echo <<<heredoc
<script>
document.getElementById("State").querySelector('option[value="{$_GET['State']}"]').selected = true;
</script>
heredoc;
}
?>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

This is simple method to make default option selected.

Can be used for multiple selects on an HTML page.

The method:

  • Find every select
  • Read the id and value of that select
  • Make the option selected

Note:

  • Every select must have ID to avoid conflict

$(document).ready(function() {
  // Loop for every select in page
  $('select').each(function(index, id) {
    // Get the value 
    var theValue = $(this).attr('value');

    // Get the ID  
    var theID = $(this).attr('id');

    // Make option selected 
    $('select#' + theID + ' option[value=' + theValue + ']').attr('selected', true);
  });
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.0.0/jquery.min.js"></script>

<select id="sport" name="sport" class="autoselect" value="golf">
<option value="basket">Basket Ball</option>
<option value="tennis">Tennis</option>
<option value="golf">Golf</option>
<option value="bowling">Bowling</option>
</select>

<hr>

<select id="tools" name="tools" class="autoselect" value="saw">
<option value="hammer">Hammer</option>
<option value="drill">Drill</option>
<option value="screwdriver">Screwdriver</option>
<option value="saw">Saw</option>
<option value="wrench">Wrench</option>
</select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51

I was having some troubles with it because I need some way to choose the option dynamically accordingly to the value that I have in the database. The script bellow works like a charm to me:

<?php
//pick the value of database
$selected_sexo = $query['s_sexo'];
?>

<select name="s_sexo" id="s_sexo" required>
  <option <?php if($selected_sexo == 'M'){echo("selected");}?> value="M">M</option>
  <option <?php if($selected_sexo == 'F'){echo("selected");}?> value="F">F</option>
</select>

Answered   2023-09-21 08:07:51