Sunday, September 18, 2011

jquery ajax

jQuery provides simple yet powerfull functions which have extended the JavaScript AJAX methods and provide more flexible way. Let us see different ways of doing AJAX things in jQuery.
GET Request method using jQuery

Load a remote page using HTTP GET request method. This is an easy way to send a simple GET request to a server. It allows a single callback function to be specified that will be executed when the request is complete (and only if the response has a successful response code).
jQuery.get( url, [data], [callback], [type] )

url: (String) The URL of the page to load.
data (Optional): (Map) Key/value pairs that will be sent to the server.
callback (Optional): (Function) A function to be executed whenever the data is loaded successfully.
type (Optional): (String) Type of data to be returned to callback function: “xml”, “html”, “script”, “json”, “jsonp”, or “text”.

$.get(
"http://some-remote-site",
"{key:value}",
function(data) { alert(data); },
"html"
);

$.get(
"http://some-remote-site",
function(data) { alert(data); },
);
POST Request method using jQuery

Sending post method is also very easy with jQuery. All you have to do is just to call jQuery.post () method instead of jQuery.get (). Following is the syntax of post method.
jQuery.post( url, [data], [callback], [type] )

url: (String) The URL of the page to load.
data (Optional): (Map) Key/value pairs that will be sent to the server.
callback (Optional): (Function) A function to be executed whenever the data is loaded successfully.
type (Optional): (String) Type of data to be returned to callback function: “xml”, “html”, “script”, “json”, “jsonp”, or “text”.
?


$.post("test.php", { func: "getNameAndTime" },
function(data){
alert("Hello");
}, "json");
Get JSON using jQuery

JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) is a popular light weight format that can be used to get data from server. JSON has became very popular since that web pages have became interactive using AJAX. JSON format is easy to create from the server and easy to parse at client as it is the basic object representation in JavaScript.

JQuery provides a function that can be used to make an AJAX call and get the data in JSON format. Normally the data that we get from AJAX is converted in JSON by calling eval () method of JavaScript. But the function provided by JQuery handles this internally and provides direct JSON object as output.
jQuery.getJSON( url, [data], [callback] )


$.getJSON("http://api.flickr.com/services/feeds/photos_public.gne?tags=cat&tagmode=any&format=json&jsoncallback=?",
function(data){
$.each(data.items, function(i,item){
$("").attr("src", item.media.m).appendTo("#images");
if ( i == 3 ) return false;
});
});
AJAX Start/End using jQuery

While you make an AJAX call and get some data from server, it is good to show a progress bar or image to user so that (s)he knows that something is going on. Hence Loading… text is common in AJAX enabled application.

What if you web application is making many AJAX calls like gmail. You may want to display a Loading… text while any of AJAX call is proceeding. To achieve this ajaxStart() and ajaxComplete() methods of jQuery can be used.

ajaxStart() method registers a function handler that will be called by jQuery internally whenever an AJAX call is made. If already a request is active than the handler is not called. We can use this method to register a handler function that will display our progress bar.


$.ajaxStart(function() {
$("div#loading").text("Loading...");
});

In above code snippet, we used ajaxStart() method to register a function that set the innerHTML of div to Loading…

Similarly ajaxComplete() method can be used to register a handler function which gets called by jQuery when an AJAX request get completed and any other active request are not in progress.


$.ajaxComplete(function() {
$("div#loading").text("");
});
Serialize html form using jQuery

While submitting a form using AJAX, one has to create a input string that contains the value of all the input elements on the screen. It is very difficult to create this string if your form is very big. Hence we can use jQuery’s serialize() and serializeArray() method to do so.
serialize()

Serializes a set of input elements into a string of data. Serialize is typically used to prepare user input data to be posted to a server. The serialized data is in a standard format that is compatible with almost all server side programming languages and frameworks. In order to work properly serialize requires that form fields have a name attribute. Having only an id will not work.


var str = $("form").serialize();
$("#results").text(str);

In above code snippet, we created a serialize output of the form. This value can be sent to server by an AJAX call.
serializeArray()

serializeArray() does the similar job. Except it creates JSON output.


[
{name: 'firstname', value: 'Hello'},
{name: 'lastname', value: 'World'},
{name: 'alias'}, // this one was empty
]
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