But you can't manipulate HTML only. All HTML changes need to be mirrored in form generating function in PHP. MI. -----Original Message----- From: development-bounces@drupal.org [mailto:development-bounces@drupal.org] On Behalf Of Alessandro Feijó Sent: 15 January 2008 17:49 To: development@drupal.org Subject: Re: [development] $form #tree issue Wont work, a solution should be manipulate the cloned HTML and change the index to the next avaiable, but it would be a PITA :) Can I build a FORM without that index that Drupal set?? Feijó ----- Original Message ----- From: "Maciek Iwanowski" <maciek.iwanowski@glasspartnership.co.uk> To: <development@drupal.org> Sent: Tuesday, January 15, 2008 3:39 PM Subject: Re: [development] $form #tree issue Maybe you can try to add another field indicating number of cloned fields? MI. -----Original Message----- From: development-bounces@drupal.org [mailto:development-bounces@drupal.org] On Behalf Of Alessandro Feijó Sent: 15 January 2008 16:57 To: development@drupal.org; brad@atendesigngroup.com Subject: Re: [development] $form #tree issue Not quite that I have dynamic fields inserted through jQuery, not via loop in PHP. So, I need array My form its been builted with index ( criteria[1][value[]] ) (note digit 1), my jQuery will clone that, the new field will be equal. In theory, should work, because the value[] has no index, but strangly the array returned within $form_values does not have all my content :( Feijó