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+---
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+layout: default
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+title: Select2 4.0.0 Released
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+slug: announcements-4.0
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+---
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+<section id="pre-release" class="jumbotron">
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+ <div class="container">
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+ <h1>Announcing Select2 4.0.0</h1>
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+ </div>
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+</section>
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+
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+<div class="container s2-docs-container">
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+ <div class="row">
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+ <div class="col-md-9" role="main">
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+
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+ <section id="release">
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+ <h1 class="page-header">Select2 4.0.0</h1>
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+
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+ <p class="lead">
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+ The 4.0 release of Select2 is the result of three years of working on the
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+ code base and watching where it needs to go. At the core, it is a full
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+ rewrite that addresses many of the extensibility and usability problems
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+ that could not be addressed in previous versions.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ This release contains many breaking changes, but easy-upgrade paths have
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+ been created as well as helper modules that will allow for backwards
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+ compatibility to be maintained with past versions of Select2. Upgrading
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+ <em>will</em> require you to read the release notes carefully, but the
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+ migration path should be relatively straightforward. You can view a list
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+ of the most common changes that you will need to make
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+ <a href="https://github.com/select2/select2/releases">in the release notes</a>.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ Below is an in-depth review of what is new in Select2, as well as some of
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+ the major changes that have been made.
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+ </p>
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+ </section>
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+
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+ <section id="new">
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+ <h2>New features</h2>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ The notable features of this new release include:
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <ul>
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+ <li>
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+ A more flexible plugin framework that allows you to override Select2 to
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+ behave exactly how you want it to.
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+ </li>
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+ <li>
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+ Consistency with standard <code><select></code> elements for all
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+ data adapters, removing the need for hidden <code><input></code>
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+ elements.
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+ </li>
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+ <li>
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+ A new build system that uses AMD to keep everything organized.
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+ </li>
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+ <li>
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+ Less specific selectors allowing for Select2 to be styled to fit the
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+ rest of your application.
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+ </li>
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+ </ul>
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+ </section>
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+
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+ <section id="plugins">
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+ <h2>Plugin system</h2>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ Select2 now provides interfaces that allow for it to be easily extended,
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+ allowing for anyone to create a plugin that changes the way Select2 works.
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+ This is the result of Select2 being broken into four distinct sections,
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+ each of which can be extended and used together to create your unique
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+ Select2.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ The adapters implement a consistent interface that is documented in the
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+ <a href="options.html#adapters">options section for adapters</a>, allowing
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+ you to customize Select2 to do exactly what you are looking for. Select2
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+ is designed such that you can mix and match plugins, with most of the core
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+ options being built as decorators that wrap the standard adapters.
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+ </p>
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+ </section>
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+
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+ <section id="amd-builds">
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+ <h2>AMD-based build system</h2>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ Select2 now uses an
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+ <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asynchronous_module_definition">AMD-based build system</a>,
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+ allowing for builds that only require the parts of Select2 that you need.
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+ While a custom build system has not yet been created, Select2 is open
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+ source and will gladly accept a pull request for one.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ Select2 includes the minimal <a href="https://github.com/jrburke/almond">almond</a>
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+ AMD loader, but a custom <code>select2.amd.js</code> build is available
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+ if you already use an AMD loader. The code base (available in the
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+ <code>src</code> directory) also uses AMD, allowing you to include Select2
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+ in your own build system and generate your own builds alongside your
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+ existing infrastructure.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ The AMD methods used by Select2 are available as
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+ <code>jQuery.fn.select2.amd.define()/require()</code>, allowing you to use the
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+ included almond loader. These methods are primarily used by the
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+ translations, but they are the recommended way to access custom modules
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+ that Select2 provides.
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+ </p>
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+ </section>
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+
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+ <section id="migrating">
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+ <h1>Migrating from Select2 3.5</h1>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ There are a few breaking changes that migrators should be aware of when
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+ they are coming from older versions of Select2.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ If you use the full build of Select2 (<code>select2.full.js</code>), you
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+ will be automatically notified of the major breaking changes, and
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+ compatibility modules will be used in some cases to ensure that your code
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+ still behaves how you were expecting.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <h2 id="hidden-input">No more hidden input tags</h2>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ In past versions of Select2, an <code><input type="hidden" /></code>
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+ tag was recommended if you wanted to do anything advanced with Select2,
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+ such as work with remote data sources or allow users to add their own
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+ tags. This had the unfortunate side-effect of servers not receiving the
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+ data from Select2 as an array, like a standard <code><select></code>
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+ element does, but instead sending a string containing the comma-separated
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+ strings. The code base ended up being littered with special cases for the
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+ hidden input, and libraries using Select2 had to work around the
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+ differences it caused.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ In Select2 4.0, the <code><select></code> element supports all core
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+ options, and support for the old
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+ <code><input type="hidden" /></code> has been deprecated. This means
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+ that if you previously declared an AJAX field with some pre-selected
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+ options that looked like…
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+ </p>
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+
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+{% highlight html linenos %}
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+<input type="hidden" name="select-boxes" value="1,2,4,6" />
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+{% endhighlight %}
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+
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+ <p>
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+ It will need to be recreated as a <code><select></code> element with
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+ some <code><option></code> tags that have <code>value</code>
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+ attributes that match the old value.
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+ </p>
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+
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+{% highlight html linenos %}
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+<select name="select-boxes" multiple="multiple">
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+ <option value="1" selected="selected">Select2</option>
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+ <option value="2" selected="selected">Chosen</option>
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+ <option value="4" selected="selected">selectize.js</option>
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+ <option value="6" selected="selected">typeahead.js</option>
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+</select>
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+{% endhighlight %}
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+
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+ <p>
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+ The options that you create should have <code>selected="selected"</code>
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+ set so Select2 and the browser knows that they should be selected. The
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+ <code>value</code> attribute of the option should also be set to the value
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+ that will be returned from the server for the result, so Select2 can
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+ highlight it as selected in the dropdown. The text within the option
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+ should also reflect the value that should be displayed by default for the
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+ option.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <h2 id="new-matcher">Advanced matching of searches</h2>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ In past versions of Select2, when matching search terms to individual
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+ options, which limited the control that you had when displaying results,
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+ especially in cases where there was nested data. The <code>matcher</code>
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+ function was only given the individual option, even if it was a nested
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+ options, without any context.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ With the new matcher function, only the root-level options are matched and
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+ matchers are expected to limit the results of any children options that
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+ they contain. This allows developers to customize how options within
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+ groups can be displayed, and modify how the results are returned.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ A function has been created that allows old-style matcher functions to be
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+ converted to the new style. You can retrieve the function from the
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+ <code>select2/compat/matcher</code> module, which should just wrap the old
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+ matcher function.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ So if your old code used a matcher that only displayed options if they
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+ started with the term that was entered, it would look something like…
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+ </p>
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+
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+{% highlight js linenos %}
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+function matchStart (term, text) {
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+ if (text.toUpperCase().indexOf(term.toUpperCase()) == 0) {
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+ return true;
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+ }
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+
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+ return false;
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+}
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+
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+$("select").select2({
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+ matcher: matchStart
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+})
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+{% endhighlight %}
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+
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+ <p>
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+ Then in Select2 4.0, you would need to wrap the <code>matchStart</code>
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+ method (or the name of the matcher you created) with a
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+ <code>oldMatcher</code> method that we have created.
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+ </p>
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+
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+{% highlight js linenos %}
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+function matchStart (term, text) {
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+ if (text.toUpperCase().indexOf(term.toUpperCase()) == 0) {
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+ return true;
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+ }
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+
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+ return false;
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+}
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+
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+$.fn.select2.amd.require(['select2/compat/matcher'], function (oldMatcher) {
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+ $("select").select2({
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+ matcher: oldMatcher(matchStart)
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+ })
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+});
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+{% endhighlight %}
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+
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+ <p>
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+ This will work for any matchers that only took in the search term and the
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+ text of the option as parameters. If your matcher relied on the third
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+ parameter containing the jQuery element representing the original
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+ <code><option></code> tag, then you may need to slightly change
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+ your matcher to expect the full JavaScript data object being passed in
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+ instead. You can still retrieve the jQuery element from the data object
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+ using the <code>data.element</code> property.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <h2 id="flexible-placeholders">More flexible placeholders</h2>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ In the most recent versions of Select2, placeholders could only be
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+ applied to the first (typically the default) option in a
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+ <code><select></code> if it was blank. The
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+ <code>placeholderOption</code> option was added to Select2 to allow users
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+ using the <code>select</code> tag to select a different option, typically
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+ an automatically generated option with a different value.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ The <code>placeholder</code> option can now take an object as well as just
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+ a string. This replaces the need for the old
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+ <code>placeholderOption</code>, as now the <code>id</code> of the object
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+ can be set to the <code>value</code> attribute of the
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+ <code><option></code> tag.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ For a select that looks like the following, where the first option (with a
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+ value of <code>-1</code>) is the placeholder option…
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+ </p>
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+
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+{% highlight html linenos %}
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+<select>
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+ <option value="-1" selected="selected">Select an option</option>
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+ <option value="1">Something else</option>
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+</select>
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+{% endhighlight %}
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+
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+ <p>
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+ You would have previously had to get the placeholder option through the
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+ <code>placeholderOption</code>, but now you can do it through the
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+ <code>placeholder</code> option by setting an <code>id</code>.
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+ </p>
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+
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+{% highlight js linenos %}
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+$("select").select2({
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+ placeholder: {
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+ id: "-1",
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+ placeholder: "Select an option"
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+ }
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+})
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+{% endhighlight %}
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+
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+ <p>
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+ And Select2 will automatically display the placeholder when the value of
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+ the select is <code>-1</code>, which it will be by default. This does not
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+ break the old functionality of Select2 where the placeholder option was
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+ blank by default.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <h2 id="value-ordering">Display reflects the actual order of the values</h2>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ In past versions of Select2, choices were displayed in the order that
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+ they were selected. In cases where Select2 was used on a
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+ <code><select></code> element, the order that the server received
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+ the selections did not always match the order that the choices were
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+ displayed, resulting in confusion in situations where the order is
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+ important.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ Select2 will now order selected choices in the same order that will be
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+ sent to the server.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <h2 id="changed-options">Changed method and option names</h2>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ When designing the future option set for Select2 4.0, special care was
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+ taken to ensure that the most commonly used options were brought over.
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+ For the most part, the commonly used options of Select2 can still be
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+ referenced under their previous names, but there were some changes which
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+ have been noted.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <h3 id="removed-initselection">
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+ Removed the requirement of <code>initSelection</code>
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+ </h3>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ In the past, whenever you wanted to use a custom data adapter, such as
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+ AJAX or tagging, you needed to help Select2 out in determining the initial
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+ values that were selected. This was typically done through the
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+ <code>initSelection</code> option, which took the underlying data of the
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+ input and converted it into data objects that Select2 could use.
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+ </p>
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+
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+ <p>
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+ This is now handled by
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+ <a href="options.html#dataAdapter">the data adapter</a> in the
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+ <code>current</code> method, which allows Select2 to convert the currently
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+ selected values into data objects that can be displayed. The default
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+ implementation converts the text and value of <code>option</code> elements
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+ into data objects, and is probably suitable for most cases. An example of
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+ the old <code>initSelection</code> option is included below, which
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+ converts the value of the selected options into a data object with both
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+ the <code>id</code> and <code>text</code> matching the selected value.
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+ </p>
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+
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+{% highlight js linenos %}
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+{
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+ initSelection : function (element, callback) {
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+ var data = [];
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+ $(element.val()).each(function () {
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+ data.push({id: this, text: this});
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+ });
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+ callback(data);
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+ }
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+}
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+{% endhighlight %}
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+
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+ <p>
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+ When using the new <code>current</code> method of the custom data adapter,
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+ <strong>this method is called any time Select2 needs a list</strong> of
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+ the currently selected options. This is different from the old
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+ <code>initSelection</code> in that it was only called once, so it could
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+ suffer from being relatively slow to process the data (such as from a
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+ remote data source).
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+ </p>
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+
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+{% highlight js linenos %}
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+$.fn.select2.amd.require([
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+ 'select2/data/array',
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+ 'select2/utils'
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+], function (ArrayData, Utils) {
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+ function CustomData ($element, options) {
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+ CustomData.__super__.constructor.call(this, $element, options);
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+ }
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+
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+ Utils.Extend(CustomData, ArrayData);
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+
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+ CustomData.prototype.current = function (callback) {
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+ var data = [];
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+ var currentVal = this.$element.val();
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+
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+ if (!this.$element.prop('multiple')) {
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+ currentVal = [currentVal];
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+ }
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+
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+ for (var v = 0; v < currentVal.length; v++) {
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+ data.push({
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+ id: currentVal[v],
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+ text: currentVal[v]
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+ });
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+ }
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+
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+ callback(data);
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+ };
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+
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|
|
+ $("#select").select2({
|
|
|
+ dataAdapter: CustomData
|
|
|
+ });
|
|
|
+}
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ The new <code>current</code> method of the data adapter works in a similar
|
|
|
+ way to the old <code>initSelection</code> method, with three notable
|
|
|
+ differences. The first, and most important, is that <strong>it is called
|
|
|
+ whenever the current selections are needed</strong> to ensure that Select2
|
|
|
+ is always displaying the most accurate and up to date data. No matter
|
|
|
+ what type of element Select2 is attached to, whether it supports a
|
|
|
+ single or multiple selections, the data passed to the callback
|
|
|
+ <strong>must be an array, even if it contains one selection</strong>.
|
|
|
+ The last is that there is only one parameter, the callback to be
|
|
|
+ executed with the latest data, and the current element that Select2 is
|
|
|
+ attached to is available on the class itself as
|
|
|
+ <code>this.$element</code>.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ If you only need to load in the initial options once, and otherwise will
|
|
|
+ be letting Select2 handle the state of the selections, you don't need to
|
|
|
+ use a custom data adapter. You can just create the
|
|
|
+ <code><option></code> tags on your own, and Select2 will pick up
|
|
|
+ the changes.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+{% highlight js linenos %}
|
|
|
+var $element = $('select').select2(); // the select element you are working with
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+var $request = $.ajax({
|
|
|
+ url: '/my/remote/source' // wherever your data is actually coming from
|
|
|
+});
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+$request.then(function (data) {
|
|
|
+ // This assumes that the data comes back as an array of data objects
|
|
|
+ // The idea is that you are using the same callback as the old `initSelection`
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ for (var d = 0; d < data.length; d++) {
|
|
|
+ var item = data[d];
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ // Create the DOM option that is pre-selected by default
|
|
|
+ var option = new Option(item.text, item.id, true, true);
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ // Append it to the select
|
|
|
+ $element.append(option);
|
|
|
+ }
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ // Update the selected options that are displayed
|
|
|
+ $element.trigger('change');
|
|
|
+});
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h3 id="query-to-data-adapter">
|
|
|
+ Custom data adapters instead of <code>query</code>
|
|
|
+ </h3>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ <a href="http://select2.github.io/select2/#data">In the past</a>, any time
|
|
|
+ you wanted to hook Select2 up to a different data source you would be
|
|
|
+ required to implement custom <code>query</code> and
|
|
|
+ <code>initSelection</code> methods. This allowed Select2 to determine the
|
|
|
+ initial selection and the list of results to display, and it would handle
|
|
|
+ everything else internally, which was fine more most people.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ The custom <code>query</code> and <code>initSelection</code> methods have
|
|
|
+ been replaced by
|
|
|
+ <a href="options.html#dataAdapter">custom data adapters</a> that handle
|
|
|
+ how Select2 stores and retrieves the data that will be displayed to the
|
|
|
+ user. An example of the old <code>query</code> option is provided below,
|
|
|
+ which is
|
|
|
+ <a href="http://select2.github.io/select2/#data">the same as the old example</a>,
|
|
|
+ and it generates results that contain the search term repeated a certain
|
|
|
+ number of times.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+{% highlight js linenos %}
|
|
|
+{
|
|
|
+ query: function (query) {
|
|
|
+ var data = {results: []}, i, j, s;
|
|
|
+ for (i = 1; i < 5; i++) {
|
|
|
+ s = "";
|
|
|
+ for (j = 0; j < i; j++) {s = s + query.term;}
|
|
|
+ data.results.push({id: query.term + i, text: s});
|
|
|
+ }
|
|
|
+ query.callback(data);
|
|
|
+ }
|
|
|
+}
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ This has been replaced by custom data adapters which define a similarly
|
|
|
+ named <code>query</code> method. The comparable data adapter is provided
|
|
|
+ below as an example.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+{% highlight js linenos %}
|
|
|
+$.fn.select2.amd.require([
|
|
|
+ 'select2/data/array',
|
|
|
+ 'select2/utils'
|
|
|
+], function (ArrayData, Utils) {
|
|
|
+ function CustomData ($element, options) {
|
|
|
+ CustomData.__super__.constructor.call(this, $element, options);
|
|
|
+ }
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ Utils.Extend(CustomData, ArrayData);
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ CustomData.prototype.query = function (params, callback) {
|
|
|
+ var data = {
|
|
|
+ results: []
|
|
|
+ };
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ for (var i = 1; i < 5; i++) {
|
|
|
+ var s = "";
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ for (var j = 0; j < i; j++) {
|
|
|
+ s = s + params.term;
|
|
|
+ }
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ data.results.push({
|
|
|
+ id: params.term + i,
|
|
|
+ text: s
|
|
|
+ });
|
|
|
+ }
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ callback(data);
|
|
|
+ };
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ $("#select").select2({
|
|
|
+ dataAdapter: CustomData
|
|
|
+ });
|
|
|
+}
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ The new <code>query</code> method of the data adapter is very similar to
|
|
|
+ the old <code>query</code> option that was passed into Select2 when
|
|
|
+ initializing it. The old <code>query</code> argument is mostly the same as
|
|
|
+ the new <code>params</code> that are passed in to query on, and the
|
|
|
+ callback that should be used to return the results is now passed in as the
|
|
|
+ second parameter.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h3 id="changed-templating">Renamed templating options</h3>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ Select2 previously provided multiple options for formatting the results
|
|
|
+ list and selected options, commonly referred to as "formatters", using the
|
|
|
+ <code>formatSelection</code> and <code>formatResult</code> options. As the
|
|
|
+ "formatters" were also used for things such as localization,
|
|
|
+ <a href="#changed-translations">which has also changed</a>, they have been
|
|
|
+ renamed to <code>templateSelection</code> and <code>templateResult</code>
|
|
|
+ and their signatures have changed as well.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ You should refer to the updated
|
|
|
+ <a href="options.html#templating">documentation on templates</a> when
|
|
|
+ migrating from previous versions of Select2.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h3 id="changed-id">
|
|
|
+ The <code>id</code> and <code>text</code> properties are strictly enforced
|
|
|
+ </h3>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ When working with array and AJAX data in the past, Select2 allowed a
|
|
|
+ custom <code>id</code> function or attribute to be set in various places,
|
|
|
+ ranging from the initialization of Select2 to when the remote data was
|
|
|
+ being returned. This allowed Select2 to better integrate with existing
|
|
|
+ data sources that did not necessarily use the <code>id</code> attribute to
|
|
|
+ indicate the unique identifier for an object.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ Select2 no longer supports a custom <code>id</code> or <code>text</code>
|
|
|
+ to be used, but provides integration points for converting incorrect data
|
|
|
+ to the expected format.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h4>
|
|
|
+ When working with array data
|
|
|
+ </h4>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ Select2 previously supported defining array data as an object that matched
|
|
|
+ the signature of an AJAX response. A <code>text</code> property could be
|
|
|
+ specified that would map the given property to the <code>text</code>
|
|
|
+ property on the individual objects. You can now do this when initializing
|
|
|
+ Select2 by using the following jQuery code to map the old
|
|
|
+ <code>text</code> and <code>id</code> properties to the new ones.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+{% highlight js linenos %}
|
|
|
+var data = $.map([
|
|
|
+ {
|
|
|
+ pk: 1,
|
|
|
+ word: 'one'
|
|
|
+ },
|
|
|
+ {
|
|
|
+ pk: 2,
|
|
|
+ word: 'two'
|
|
|
+ }
|
|
|
+], function (obj) {
|
|
|
+ obj.id = obj.id || obj.pk;
|
|
|
+ obj.text = obj.text || obj.word;
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ return obj;
|
|
|
+});
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ This will result in an array of data objects that have the <code>id</code>
|
|
|
+ properties that match the existing <code>pk</code> properties and
|
|
|
+ <code>text</code> properties that match the existing <code>word</code>
|
|
|
+ properties.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h4>
|
|
|
+ When working with remote data
|
|
|
+ </h4>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ The same code that was given above can be used in the
|
|
|
+ <code>processResults</code> method of an AJAX call to map properties there
|
|
|
+ as well.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h3 id="changed-translations">Renamed translation options</h3>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ In previous versions of Select2, the default messages provided to users
|
|
|
+ could be localized to fit the language of the website that it was being
|
|
|
+ used on. Select2 only comes with the English language by default, but
|
|
|
+ provides
|
|
|
+ <a href="options.html#language">community-contributed translations</a> for
|
|
|
+ many common languages. Many of the formatters have been moved to the
|
|
|
+ <code>language</code> option and the signatures of the formatters have
|
|
|
+ been changed to handle future additions.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h3 id="changed-data">
|
|
|
+ Declaring options using <code>data-*</code> attributes
|
|
|
+ </h3>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ In the past, Select2 has only supported declaring a subset of options
|
|
|
+ using <code>data-*</code> attributes. Select2 now supports declaring all
|
|
|
+ options using the attributes, using
|
|
|
+ <a href="options.html#data-attributes">the format specified in the documentation</a>.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ You could previously declare the URL that was used for AJAX requests using
|
|
|
+ the <code>data-ajax-url</code> attribute. While Select2 still allows for
|
|
|
+ this, the new attribute that should be used is the
|
|
|
+ <code>data-ajax--url</code> attribute. Support for the old attribute will
|
|
|
+ be removed in Select2 4.1.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ Although it was not documented, a list of possible tags could also be
|
|
|
+ provided using the <code>data-select2-tags</code> attribute and passing in
|
|
|
+ a JSON-formatted array of objects for tags. As the method for specifying
|
|
|
+ tags has changed in 4.0, you should now provide the array of objects using
|
|
|
+ the <code>data-data</code> attribute, which maps to
|
|
|
+ <a href="options.html#data">the array data</a> option. You should also
|
|
|
+ enable tags by setting <code>data-tags="true"</code> on the object, to
|
|
|
+ maintain the ability for users to create their own options as well.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ If you previously declared the list of tags as…
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+{% highlight html linenos %}
|
|
|
+<select data-select2-tags='[{"id": "1", "text": "One"}, {"id": "2", "text": "Two"}]'></select>
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ …then you should now declare it as…
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+{% highlight html linenos %}
|
|
|
+<select data-data='[{"id": "1", "text": "One"}, {"id": "2", "text": "Two"}]' data-tags="true"></select>
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h2 id="removed-methods">Deprecated and removed methods</h2>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ As Select2 now uses a <code><select></code> element for all data
|
|
|
+ sources, a few methods that were available by calling
|
|
|
+ <code>.select2()</code> are no longer required.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h3>.select2("val")</h3>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ The <code>"val"</code> method has been deprecated and will be removed in
|
|
|
+ Select2 4.1. The deprecated method no longer includes the
|
|
|
+ <code>triggerChange</code> parameter.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ You should directly call <code>.val</code> on the underlying
|
|
|
+ <code><select></code> element instead. If you needed the second
|
|
|
+ parameter (<code>triggerChange</code>), you should also call
|
|
|
+ <code>.trigger("change")</code> on the element.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+{% highlight js linenos %}
|
|
|
+$("select").val("1").trigger("change"); // instead of $("select").select2("val", "1");
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <h3>.select2("enable")</h3>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ <p>
|
|
|
+ Select2 will respect the <code>disabled</code> property of the underlying
|
|
|
+ select element. In order to enable or disable Select2, you should call
|
|
|
+ <code>.prop('disabled', true/false)</code> on the
|
|
|
+ <code><select></code> element. Support for the old methods will be
|
|
|
+ completely removed in Select2 4.1.
|
|
|
+ </p>
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+{% highlight js linenos %}
|
|
|
+$("select").prop("disabled", true); // instead of $("select").enable(false);
|
|
|
+{% endhighlight %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ </section>
|
|
|
+ </div>
|
|
|
+ <div class="col-md-3" role="complementary">
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ {% include nav/announcements-4.0.html %}
|
|
|
+
|
|
|
+ </div>
|
|
|
+ </div>
|
|
|
+</div>
|