How can i excute a function after all ajax requests complete? [duplicate] - javascript
How do I make a function wait until all jQuery Ajax requests are done inside another function?
In short, I need to wait for all Ajax requests to be done before I execute the next. But how?
jQuery now defines a when function for this purpose.
It accepts any number of Deferred objects as arguments, and executes a function when all of them resolve.
That means, if you want to initiate (for example) four ajax requests, then perform an action when they are done, you could do something like this:
$.when(ajax1(), ajax2(), ajax3(), ajax4()).done(function(a1, a2, a3, a4){
// the code here will be executed when all four ajax requests resolve.
// a1, a2, a3 and a4 are lists of length 3 containing the response text,
// status, and jqXHR object for each of the four ajax calls respectively.
});
function ajax1() {
// NOTE: This function must return the value
// from calling the $.ajax() method.
return $.ajax({
url: "someUrl",
dataType: "json",
data: yourJsonData,
...
});
}
In my opinion, it makes for a clean and clear syntax, and avoids involving any global variables such as ajaxStart and ajaxStop, which could have unwanted side effects as your page develops.
If you don't know in advance how many ajax arguments you need to wait for (i.e. you want to use a variable number of arguments), it can still be done but is just a little bit trickier. See Pass in an array of Deferreds to $.when() (and maybe jQuery .when troubleshooting with variable number of arguments).
If you need deeper control over the failure modes of the ajax scripts etc., you can save the object returned by .when() - it's a jQuery Promise object encompassing all of the original ajax queries. You can call .then() or .fail() on it to add detailed success/failure handlers.
If you want to know when all ajax requests are finished in your document, no matter how many of them exists, just use $.ajaxStop event this way:
$(document).ajaxStop(function () {
// 0 === $.active
});
In this case, neither you need to guess how many requests are happening in the application, that might finish in the future, nor dig into functions complex logic or find which functions are doing HTTP(S) requests.
$.ajaxStop here can also be bound to any HTML node that you
think might be modified by requst.
Update:
If you want to stick with ES syntax, then you can use Promise.all for known ajax methods:
Promise.all([ajax1(), ajax2()]).then(() => {
// all requests finished successfully
}).catch(() => {
// all requests finished but one or more failed
})
An interesting point here is that it works both with Promises and $.ajax requests.
Here is the jsFiddle demonstration.
Update 2:
Yet more recent version using async/await syntax:
try {
const results = await Promise.all([ajax1(), ajax2()])
// do other actions
} catch(ex) { }
I found a good answer by gnarf my self which is exactly what I was looking for :)
jQuery ajaxQueue
//This handles the queues
(function($) {
var ajaxQueue = $({});
$.ajaxQueue = function(ajaxOpts) {
var oldComplete = ajaxOpts.complete;
ajaxQueue.queue(function(next) {
ajaxOpts.complete = function() {
if (oldComplete) oldComplete.apply(this, arguments);
next();
};
$.ajax(ajaxOpts);
});
};
})(jQuery);
Then you can add a ajax request to the queue like this:
$.ajaxQueue({
url: 'page.php',
data: {id: 1},
type: 'POST',
success: function(data) {
$('#status').html(data);
}
});
Use the ajaxStop event.
For example, let's say you have a loading ... message while fetching 100 ajax requests and you want to hide that message once loaded.
From the jQuery doc:
$("#loading").ajaxStop(function() {
$(this).hide();
});
Do note that it will wait for all ajax requests being done on that page.
NOTE: The above answers use functionality that didn't exist at the time that this answer was written. I recommend using jQuery.when() instead of these approaches, but I'm leaving the answer for historical purposes.
-
You could probably get by with a simple counting semaphore, although how you implement it would be dependent on your code. A simple example would be something like...
var semaphore = 0, // counting semaphore for ajax requests
all_queued = false; // bool indicator to account for instances where the first request might finish before the second even starts
semaphore++;
$.get('ajax/test1.html', function(data) {
semaphore--;
if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) {
// process your custom stuff here
}
});
semaphore++;
$.get('ajax/test2.html', function(data) {
semaphore--;
if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) {
// process your custom stuff here
}
});
semaphore++;
$.get('ajax/test3.html', function(data) {
semaphore--;
if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) {
// process your custom stuff here
}
});
semaphore++;
$.get('ajax/test4.html', function(data) {
semaphore--;
if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) {
// process your custom stuff here
}
});
// now that all ajax requests are queued up, switch the bool to indicate it
all_queued = true;
If you wanted this to operate like {async: false} but you didn't want to lock the browser, you could accomplish the same thing with a jQuery queue.
var $queue = $("<div/>");
$queue.queue(function(){
$.get('ajax/test1.html', function(data) {
$queue.dequeue();
});
}).queue(function(){
$.get('ajax/test2.html', function(data) {
$queue.dequeue();
});
}).queue(function(){
$.get('ajax/test3.html', function(data) {
$queue.dequeue();
});
}).queue(function(){
$.get('ajax/test4.html', function(data) {
$queue.dequeue();
});
});
A little workaround is something like this:
// Define how many Ajax calls must be done
var ajaxCalls = 3;
var counter = 0;
var ajaxCallComplete = function() {
counter++;
if( counter >= ajaxCalls ) {
// When all ajax calls has been done
// Do something like hide waiting images, or any else function call
$('*').css('cursor', 'auto');
}
};
var loadPersons = function() {
// Show waiting image, or something else
$('*').css('cursor', 'wait');
var url = global.ctx + '/loadPersons';
$.getJSON(url, function(data) {
// Fun things
})
.complete(function() { **ajaxCallComplete();** });
};
var loadCountries = function() {
// Do things
var url = global.ctx + '/loadCountries';
$.getJSON(url, function(data) {
// Travels
})
.complete(function() { **ajaxCallComplete();** });
};
var loadCities = function() {
// Do things
var url = global.ctx + '/loadCities';
$.getJSON(url, function(data) {
// Travels
})
.complete(function() { **ajaxCallComplete();** });
};
$(document).ready(function(){
loadPersons();
loadCountries();
loadCities();
});
Hope can be useful...
javascript is event-based, so you should never wait, rather set hooks/callbacks
You can probably just use the success/complete methods of jquery.ajax
Or you could use .ajaxComplete :
$('.log').ajaxComplete(function(e, xhr, settings) {
if (settings.url == 'ajax/test.html') {
$(this).text('Triggered ajaxComplete handler.');
//and you can do whatever other processing here, including calling another function...
}
});
though youy should post a pseudocode of how your(s) ajax request(s) is(are) called to be more precise...
jQuery allows you to specify if you want the ajax request to be asynchronous or not. You can simply make the ajax requests synchronous and then the rest of the code won't execute until they return.
For example:
jQuery.ajax({
async: false,
//code
});
As other answers mentioned you can use ajaxStop() to wait until all ajax request are completed.
$(document).ajaxStop(function() {
// This function will be triggered every time any ajax request is requested and completed
});
If you want do it for an specific ajax() request the best you can do is use complete() method inside the certain ajax request:
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "someUrl",
success: function(data) {
// This function will be triggered when ajax returns a 200 status code (success)
},
complete: function() {
// This function will be triggered always, when ajax request is completed, even it fails/returns other status code
},
error: function() {
// This will be triggered when ajax request fail.
}
});
But, If you need to wait only for a few and certain ajax request to be done? Use the wonderful javascript promises to wait until the these ajax you want to wait are done. I made a shortly, easy and readable example to show you how does promises works with ajax. Please take a look to the next example. I used setTimeout to clarify the example.
// Note:
// resolve() is used to mark the promise as resolved
// reject() is used to mark the promise as rejected
$(document).ready(function() {
$("button").on("click", function() {
var ajax1 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
$.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: "https://miro.medium.com/max/1200/0*UEtwA2ask7vQYW06.png",
xhrFields: { responseType: 'blob'},
success: function(data) {
setTimeout(function() {
$('#image1').attr("src", window.URL.createObjectURL(data));
resolve(" Promise ajax1 resolved");
}, 1000);
},
error: function() {
reject(" Promise ajax1 rejected");
},
});
});
var ajax2 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
$.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: "https://cdn1.iconfinder.com/data/icons/social-media-vol-1-1/24/_github-512.png",
xhrFields: { responseType: 'blob' },
success: function(data) {
setTimeout(function() {
$('#image2').attr("src", window.URL.createObjectURL(data));
resolve(" Promise ajax2 resolved");
}, 1500);
},
error: function() {
reject(" Promise ajax2 rejected");
},
});
});
var ajax3 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
$.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: "https://miro.medium.com/max/632/1*LUfpOf7teWvPdIPTBmYciA.png",
xhrFields: { responseType: 'blob' },
success: function(data) {
setTimeout(function() {
$('#image3').attr("src", window.URL.createObjectURL(data));
resolve(" Promise ajax3 resolved");
}, 2000);
},
error: function() {
reject(" Promise ajax3 rejected");
},
});
});
Promise.all([ajax1, ajax2, ajax3]).then(values => {
console.log("We waited until ajax ended: " + values);
console.log("My few ajax ended, lets do some things!!")
}, reason => {
console.log("Promises failed: " + reason);
});
// Or if you want wait for them individually do it like this
// ajax1.then(values => {
// console.log("Promise 1 resolved: " + values)
// }, reason => {
// console.log("Promise 1 failed: " + reason)
// });
});
});
img {
max-width: 200px;
max-height: 100px;
}
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<button>Make AJAX request</button>
<div id="newContent">
<img id="image1" src="">
<img id="image2" src="">
<img id="image3" src="">
</div>
If you need something simple; once and done callback
//multiple ajax calls above
var callback = function () {
if ($.active !== 0) {
setTimeout(callback, '500');
return;
}
//whatever you need to do here
//...
};
callback();
Also you could use async.js.
I think its better than $.when because you can merge all kinds of asynchronous call that does not support promises out of the box like timeouts, SqlLite calls etc. and not just ajax requests.
On the basis of #BBonifield answer, I wrote a utility function so that semaphore logic is not spread in all the ajax calls.
untilAjax is the utility function which invokes a callback function when all the ajaxCalls are completed.
ajaxObjs is a array of ajax setting objects [http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax/].
fn is callback function
function untilAjax(ajaxObjs, fn) {
if (!ajaxObjs || !fn) {
return;
}
var ajaxCount = ajaxObjs.length,
succ = null;
for (var i = 0; i < ajaxObjs.length; i++) { //append logic to invoke callback function once all the ajax calls are completed, in success handler.
succ = ajaxObjs[i]['success'];
ajaxObjs[i]['success'] = function(data) { //modified success handler
if (succ) {
succ(data);
}
ajaxCount--;
if (ajaxCount == 0) {
fn(); //modify statement suitably if you want 'this' keyword to refer to another object
}
};
$.ajax(ajaxObjs[i]); //make ajax call
succ = null;
};
Example: doSomething function uses untilAjax.
function doSomething() {
// variable declarations
untilAjax([{
url: 'url2',
dataType: 'json',
success: function(data) {
//do something with success data
}
}, {
url: 'url1',
dataType: 'json',
success: function(data) {
//do something with success data
}
}, {
url: 'url2',
dataType: 'json',
success: function(response) {
//do something with success data
}
}], function() {
// logic after all the calls are completed.
});
}
I highly recommend using $.when() if you're starting from scratch.
Even though this question has over million answers, I still didn't find anything useful for my case. Let's say you have to deal with an existing codebase, already making some ajax calls and don't want to introduce the complexity of promises and/or redo the whole thing.
We can easily take advantage of jQuery .data, .on and .trigger functions which have been a part of jQuery since forever.
Codepen
The good stuff about my solution is:
it's obvious what the callback exactly depends on
the function triggerNowOrOnLoaded doesn't care if the data has been already loaded or we're still waiting for it
it's super easy to plug it into an existing code
$(function() {
// wait for posts to be loaded
triggerNowOrOnLoaded("posts", function() {
var $body = $("body");
var posts = $body.data("posts");
$body.append("<div>Posts: " + posts.length + "</div>");
});
// some ajax requests
$.getJSON("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts", function(data) {
$("body").data("posts", data).trigger("posts");
});
// doesn't matter if the `triggerNowOrOnLoaded` is called after or before the actual requests
$.getJSON("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users", function(data) {
$("body").data("users", data).trigger("users");
});
// wait for both types
triggerNowOrOnLoaded(["posts", "users"], function() {
var $body = $("body");
var posts = $body.data("posts");
var users = $body.data("users");
$body.append("<div>Posts: " + posts.length + " and Users: " + users.length + "</div>");
});
// works even if everything has already loaded!
setTimeout(function() {
// triggers immediately since users have been already loaded
triggerNowOrOnLoaded("users", function() {
var $body = $("body");
var users = $body.data("users");
$body.append("<div>Delayed Users: " + users.length + "</div>");
});
}, 2000); // 2 seconds
});
// helper function
function triggerNowOrOnLoaded(types, callback) {
types = $.isArray(types) ? types : [types];
var $body = $("body");
var waitForTypes = [];
$.each(types, function(i, type) {
if (typeof $body.data(type) === 'undefined') {
waitForTypes.push(type);
}
});
var isDataReady = waitForTypes.length === 0;
if (isDataReady) {
callback();
return;
}
// wait for the last type and run this function again for the rest of the types
var waitFor = waitForTypes.pop();
$body.on(waitFor, function() {
// remove event handler - we only want the stuff triggered once
$body.off(waitFor);
triggerNowOrOnLoaded(waitForTypes, callback);
});
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<body>Hi!</body>
I'm using size check when all ajax load completed
function get_ajax(link, data, callback) {
$.ajax({
url: link,
type: "GET",
data: data,
dataType: "json",
success: function (data, status, jqXHR) {
callback(jqXHR.status, data)
},
error: function (jqXHR, status, err) {
callback(jqXHR.status, jqXHR);
},
complete: function (jqXHR, status) {
}
})
}
function run_list_ajax(callback){
var size=0;
var max= 10;
for (let index = 0; index < max; index++) {
var link = 'http://api.jquery.com/ajaxStop/';
var data={i:index}
get_ajax(link,data,function(status, data){
console.log(index)
if(size>max-2){
callback('done')
}
size++
})
}
}
run_list_ajax(function(info){
console.log(info)
})
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
To expand upon Alex's answer, I have an example with variable arguments and promises. I wanted to load images via ajax and display them on the page after they all loaded.
To do that, I used the following:
let urlCreator = window.URL || window.webkitURL;
// Helper function for making ajax requests
let fetch = function(url) {
return $.ajax({
type: "get",
xhrFields: {
responseType: "blob"
},
url: url,
});
};
// Map the array of urls to an array of ajax requests
let urls = ["https://placekitten.com/200/250", "https://placekitten.com/300/250"];
let files = urls.map(url => fetch(url));
// Use the spread operator to wait for all requests
$.when(...files).then(function() {
// If we have multiple urls, then loop through
if(urls.length > 1) {
// Create image urls and tags for each result
Array.from(arguments).forEach(data => {
let imageUrl = urlCreator.createObjectURL(data[0]);
let img = `<img src=${imageUrl}>`;
$("#image_container").append(img);
});
}
else {
// Create image source and tag for result
let imageUrl = urlCreator.createObjectURL(arguments[0]);
let img = `<img src=${imageUrl}>`;
$("#image_container").append(img);
}
});
Updated to work for either single or multiple urls: https://jsfiddle.net/euypj5w9/
I found simple way, it using shift()
function waitReq(id)
{
jQuery.ajax(
{
type: 'POST',
url: ajaxurl,
data:
{
"page": id
},
success: function(resp)
{
...........
// check array length if not "0" continue to use next array value
if(ids.length)
{
waitReq(ids.shift()); // 2
)
},
error: function(resp)
{
....................
if(ids.length)
{
waitReq(ids.shift());
)
}
});
}
var ids = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
// shift() = delete first array value (then print)
waitReq(ids.shift()); // print 1
My solution is as follows
var request;
...
'services': {
'GetAddressBookData': function() {
//This is the primary service that loads all addressbook records
request = $.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "Default.aspx/GetAddressBook",
contentType: "application/json;",
dataType: "json"
});
},
...
'apps': {
'AddressBook': {
'data': "",
'Start': function() {
...services.GetAddressBookData();
request.done(function(response) {
trace("ajax successful");
..apps.AddressBook.data = response['d'];
...apps.AddressBook.Filter();
});
request.fail(function(xhr, textStatus, errorThrown) {
trace("ajax failed - " + errorThrown);
});
Worked quite nicely. I've tried a lot of different ways of doing this, but I found this to be the simplest and most reusable. Hope it helps
Look at my solution:
1.Insert this function (and variable) into your javascript file:
var runFunctionQueue_callback;
function runFunctionQueue(f, index, callback) {
var next_index = index + 1
if (callback !== undefined) runFunctionQueue_callback = callback;
if (f[next_index] !== undefined) {
console.log(index + ' Next function avalaible -> ' + next_index);
$.ajax({
type: 'GET',
url: f[index].file,
data: (f[index].data),
complete: function() {
runFunctionQueue(f, next_index);
}
});
} else {
console.log(index + ' Last function');
$.ajax({
type: 'GET',
url: f[index].file,
data: (f[index].data),
async: false,
complete: runFunctionQueue_callback
});
}
}
2.Buil an array with your requests, like this:
var f = [
{file: 'file_path', data: {action: 'action', data: 'any_data}},
{file: 'file_path', data: {action: 'action', data: 'any_data}},
{file: 'file_path', data: {action: 'action', data: 'any_data}},
{file: 'file_path', data: {action: 'action', data: 'any_data}}
];
3.Create callback function:
function Function_callback() {
alert('done');
}
4.Call the runFunctionQueue function with parameters:
runFunctionQueue(f, 0, QuestionInsert_callback);
// first parameter: array with requests data
// second parameter: start from first request
// third parameter: the callback function
$.when doesn't work for me, callback(x) instead of return x worked as described here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/13455253/10357604
The below solution worked for me using $when
$.when(master.GetStateByName(stateName)).done(function(response) {
if (response) {
}
});
GetStateByName: function(stateName) {
return $.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url: getStatesByName + '?stateName=' + stateName,
async: false,
});
}
This is working for me
It's very simple
return $.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url: urlBaseUrl
data: {someData:someData},
dataType: "json",
success: function(resultData) {
}
});
Try this way. make a loop inside java script function to wait until the ajax call finished.
function getLabelById(id)
{
var label = '';
var done = false;
$.ajax({
cache: false,
url: "YourMvcActionUrl",
type: "GET",
dataType: "json",
async: false,
error: function (result) {
label='undefined';
done = true;
},
success: function (result) {
label = result.Message;
done = true;
}
});
//A loop to check done if ajax call is done.
while (!done)
{
setTimeout(function(){ },500); // take a sleep.
}
return label;
}
Related
Do something after all ajax posts request are done [duplicate]
How do I make a function wait until all jQuery Ajax requests are done inside another function? In short, I need to wait for all Ajax requests to be done before I execute the next. But how?
jQuery now defines a when function for this purpose. It accepts any number of Deferred objects as arguments, and executes a function when all of them resolve. That means, if you want to initiate (for example) four ajax requests, then perform an action when they are done, you could do something like this: $.when(ajax1(), ajax2(), ajax3(), ajax4()).done(function(a1, a2, a3, a4){ // the code here will be executed when all four ajax requests resolve. // a1, a2, a3 and a4 are lists of length 3 containing the response text, // status, and jqXHR object for each of the four ajax calls respectively. }); function ajax1() { // NOTE: This function must return the value // from calling the $.ajax() method. return $.ajax({ url: "someUrl", dataType: "json", data: yourJsonData, ... }); } In my opinion, it makes for a clean and clear syntax, and avoids involving any global variables such as ajaxStart and ajaxStop, which could have unwanted side effects as your page develops. If you don't know in advance how many ajax arguments you need to wait for (i.e. you want to use a variable number of arguments), it can still be done but is just a little bit trickier. See Pass in an array of Deferreds to $.when() (and maybe jQuery .when troubleshooting with variable number of arguments). If you need deeper control over the failure modes of the ajax scripts etc., you can save the object returned by .when() - it's a jQuery Promise object encompassing all of the original ajax queries. You can call .then() or .fail() on it to add detailed success/failure handlers.
If you want to know when all ajax requests are finished in your document, no matter how many of them exists, just use $.ajaxStop event this way: $(document).ajaxStop(function () { // 0 === $.active }); In this case, neither you need to guess how many requests are happening in the application, that might finish in the future, nor dig into functions complex logic or find which functions are doing HTTP(S) requests. $.ajaxStop here can also be bound to any HTML node that you think might be modified by requst. Update: If you want to stick with ES syntax, then you can use Promise.all for known ajax methods: Promise.all([ajax1(), ajax2()]).then(() => { // all requests finished successfully }).catch(() => { // all requests finished but one or more failed }) An interesting point here is that it works both with Promises and $.ajax requests. Here is the jsFiddle demonstration. Update 2: Yet more recent version using async/await syntax: try { const results = await Promise.all([ajax1(), ajax2()]) // do other actions } catch(ex) { }
I found a good answer by gnarf my self which is exactly what I was looking for :) jQuery ajaxQueue //This handles the queues (function($) { var ajaxQueue = $({}); $.ajaxQueue = function(ajaxOpts) { var oldComplete = ajaxOpts.complete; ajaxQueue.queue(function(next) { ajaxOpts.complete = function() { if (oldComplete) oldComplete.apply(this, arguments); next(); }; $.ajax(ajaxOpts); }); }; })(jQuery); Then you can add a ajax request to the queue like this: $.ajaxQueue({ url: 'page.php', data: {id: 1}, type: 'POST', success: function(data) { $('#status').html(data); } });
Use the ajaxStop event. For example, let's say you have a loading ... message while fetching 100 ajax requests and you want to hide that message once loaded. From the jQuery doc: $("#loading").ajaxStop(function() { $(this).hide(); }); Do note that it will wait for all ajax requests being done on that page.
NOTE: The above answers use functionality that didn't exist at the time that this answer was written. I recommend using jQuery.when() instead of these approaches, but I'm leaving the answer for historical purposes. - You could probably get by with a simple counting semaphore, although how you implement it would be dependent on your code. A simple example would be something like... var semaphore = 0, // counting semaphore for ajax requests all_queued = false; // bool indicator to account for instances where the first request might finish before the second even starts semaphore++; $.get('ajax/test1.html', function(data) { semaphore--; if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) { // process your custom stuff here } }); semaphore++; $.get('ajax/test2.html', function(data) { semaphore--; if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) { // process your custom stuff here } }); semaphore++; $.get('ajax/test3.html', function(data) { semaphore--; if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) { // process your custom stuff here } }); semaphore++; $.get('ajax/test4.html', function(data) { semaphore--; if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) { // process your custom stuff here } }); // now that all ajax requests are queued up, switch the bool to indicate it all_queued = true; If you wanted this to operate like {async: false} but you didn't want to lock the browser, you could accomplish the same thing with a jQuery queue. var $queue = $("<div/>"); $queue.queue(function(){ $.get('ajax/test1.html', function(data) { $queue.dequeue(); }); }).queue(function(){ $.get('ajax/test2.html', function(data) { $queue.dequeue(); }); }).queue(function(){ $.get('ajax/test3.html', function(data) { $queue.dequeue(); }); }).queue(function(){ $.get('ajax/test4.html', function(data) { $queue.dequeue(); }); });
A little workaround is something like this: // Define how many Ajax calls must be done var ajaxCalls = 3; var counter = 0; var ajaxCallComplete = function() { counter++; if( counter >= ajaxCalls ) { // When all ajax calls has been done // Do something like hide waiting images, or any else function call $('*').css('cursor', 'auto'); } }; var loadPersons = function() { // Show waiting image, or something else $('*').css('cursor', 'wait'); var url = global.ctx + '/loadPersons'; $.getJSON(url, function(data) { // Fun things }) .complete(function() { **ajaxCallComplete();** }); }; var loadCountries = function() { // Do things var url = global.ctx + '/loadCountries'; $.getJSON(url, function(data) { // Travels }) .complete(function() { **ajaxCallComplete();** }); }; var loadCities = function() { // Do things var url = global.ctx + '/loadCities'; $.getJSON(url, function(data) { // Travels }) .complete(function() { **ajaxCallComplete();** }); }; $(document).ready(function(){ loadPersons(); loadCountries(); loadCities(); }); Hope can be useful...
javascript is event-based, so you should never wait, rather set hooks/callbacks You can probably just use the success/complete methods of jquery.ajax Or you could use .ajaxComplete : $('.log').ajaxComplete(function(e, xhr, settings) { if (settings.url == 'ajax/test.html') { $(this).text('Triggered ajaxComplete handler.'); //and you can do whatever other processing here, including calling another function... } }); though youy should post a pseudocode of how your(s) ajax request(s) is(are) called to be more precise...
jQuery allows you to specify if you want the ajax request to be asynchronous or not. You can simply make the ajax requests synchronous and then the rest of the code won't execute until they return. For example: jQuery.ajax({ async: false, //code });
As other answers mentioned you can use ajaxStop() to wait until all ajax request are completed. $(document).ajaxStop(function() { // This function will be triggered every time any ajax request is requested and completed }); If you want do it for an specific ajax() request the best you can do is use complete() method inside the certain ajax request: $.ajax({ type: "POST", url: "someUrl", success: function(data) { // This function will be triggered when ajax returns a 200 status code (success) }, complete: function() { // This function will be triggered always, when ajax request is completed, even it fails/returns other status code }, error: function() { // This will be triggered when ajax request fail. } }); But, If you need to wait only for a few and certain ajax request to be done? Use the wonderful javascript promises to wait until the these ajax you want to wait are done. I made a shortly, easy and readable example to show you how does promises works with ajax. Please take a look to the next example. I used setTimeout to clarify the example. // Note: // resolve() is used to mark the promise as resolved // reject() is used to mark the promise as rejected $(document).ready(function() { $("button").on("click", function() { var ajax1 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { $.ajax({ type: "GET", url: "https://miro.medium.com/max/1200/0*UEtwA2ask7vQYW06.png", xhrFields: { responseType: 'blob'}, success: function(data) { setTimeout(function() { $('#image1').attr("src", window.URL.createObjectURL(data)); resolve(" Promise ajax1 resolved"); }, 1000); }, error: function() { reject(" Promise ajax1 rejected"); }, }); }); var ajax2 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { $.ajax({ type: "GET", url: "https://cdn1.iconfinder.com/data/icons/social-media-vol-1-1/24/_github-512.png", xhrFields: { responseType: 'blob' }, success: function(data) { setTimeout(function() { $('#image2').attr("src", window.URL.createObjectURL(data)); resolve(" Promise ajax2 resolved"); }, 1500); }, error: function() { reject(" Promise ajax2 rejected"); }, }); }); var ajax3 = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { $.ajax({ type: "GET", url: "https://miro.medium.com/max/632/1*LUfpOf7teWvPdIPTBmYciA.png", xhrFields: { responseType: 'blob' }, success: function(data) { setTimeout(function() { $('#image3').attr("src", window.URL.createObjectURL(data)); resolve(" Promise ajax3 resolved"); }, 2000); }, error: function() { reject(" Promise ajax3 rejected"); }, }); }); Promise.all([ajax1, ajax2, ajax3]).then(values => { console.log("We waited until ajax ended: " + values); console.log("My few ajax ended, lets do some things!!") }, reason => { console.log("Promises failed: " + reason); }); // Or if you want wait for them individually do it like this // ajax1.then(values => { // console.log("Promise 1 resolved: " + values) // }, reason => { // console.log("Promise 1 failed: " + reason) // }); }); }); img { max-width: 200px; max-height: 100px; } <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script> <button>Make AJAX request</button> <div id="newContent"> <img id="image1" src=""> <img id="image2" src=""> <img id="image3" src=""> </div>
If you need something simple; once and done callback //multiple ajax calls above var callback = function () { if ($.active !== 0) { setTimeout(callback, '500'); return; } //whatever you need to do here //... }; callback();
Also you could use async.js. I think its better than $.when because you can merge all kinds of asynchronous call that does not support promises out of the box like timeouts, SqlLite calls etc. and not just ajax requests.
On the basis of #BBonifield answer, I wrote a utility function so that semaphore logic is not spread in all the ajax calls. untilAjax is the utility function which invokes a callback function when all the ajaxCalls are completed. ajaxObjs is a array of ajax setting objects [http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax/]. fn is callback function function untilAjax(ajaxObjs, fn) { if (!ajaxObjs || !fn) { return; } var ajaxCount = ajaxObjs.length, succ = null; for (var i = 0; i < ajaxObjs.length; i++) { //append logic to invoke callback function once all the ajax calls are completed, in success handler. succ = ajaxObjs[i]['success']; ajaxObjs[i]['success'] = function(data) { //modified success handler if (succ) { succ(data); } ajaxCount--; if (ajaxCount == 0) { fn(); //modify statement suitably if you want 'this' keyword to refer to another object } }; $.ajax(ajaxObjs[i]); //make ajax call succ = null; }; Example: doSomething function uses untilAjax. function doSomething() { // variable declarations untilAjax([{ url: 'url2', dataType: 'json', success: function(data) { //do something with success data } }, { url: 'url1', dataType: 'json', success: function(data) { //do something with success data } }, { url: 'url2', dataType: 'json', success: function(response) { //do something with success data } }], function() { // logic after all the calls are completed. }); }
I highly recommend using $.when() if you're starting from scratch. Even though this question has over million answers, I still didn't find anything useful for my case. Let's say you have to deal with an existing codebase, already making some ajax calls and don't want to introduce the complexity of promises and/or redo the whole thing. We can easily take advantage of jQuery .data, .on and .trigger functions which have been a part of jQuery since forever. Codepen The good stuff about my solution is: it's obvious what the callback exactly depends on the function triggerNowOrOnLoaded doesn't care if the data has been already loaded or we're still waiting for it it's super easy to plug it into an existing code $(function() { // wait for posts to be loaded triggerNowOrOnLoaded("posts", function() { var $body = $("body"); var posts = $body.data("posts"); $body.append("<div>Posts: " + posts.length + "</div>"); }); // some ajax requests $.getJSON("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts", function(data) { $("body").data("posts", data).trigger("posts"); }); // doesn't matter if the `triggerNowOrOnLoaded` is called after or before the actual requests $.getJSON("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/users", function(data) { $("body").data("users", data).trigger("users"); }); // wait for both types triggerNowOrOnLoaded(["posts", "users"], function() { var $body = $("body"); var posts = $body.data("posts"); var users = $body.data("users"); $body.append("<div>Posts: " + posts.length + " and Users: " + users.length + "</div>"); }); // works even if everything has already loaded! setTimeout(function() { // triggers immediately since users have been already loaded triggerNowOrOnLoaded("users", function() { var $body = $("body"); var users = $body.data("users"); $body.append("<div>Delayed Users: " + users.length + "</div>"); }); }, 2000); // 2 seconds }); // helper function function triggerNowOrOnLoaded(types, callback) { types = $.isArray(types) ? types : [types]; var $body = $("body"); var waitForTypes = []; $.each(types, function(i, type) { if (typeof $body.data(type) === 'undefined') { waitForTypes.push(type); } }); var isDataReady = waitForTypes.length === 0; if (isDataReady) { callback(); return; } // wait for the last type and run this function again for the rest of the types var waitFor = waitForTypes.pop(); $body.on(waitFor, function() { // remove event handler - we only want the stuff triggered once $body.off(waitFor); triggerNowOrOnLoaded(waitForTypes, callback); }); } <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script> <body>Hi!</body>
I'm using size check when all ajax load completed function get_ajax(link, data, callback) { $.ajax({ url: link, type: "GET", data: data, dataType: "json", success: function (data, status, jqXHR) { callback(jqXHR.status, data) }, error: function (jqXHR, status, err) { callback(jqXHR.status, jqXHR); }, complete: function (jqXHR, status) { } }) } function run_list_ajax(callback){ var size=0; var max= 10; for (let index = 0; index < max; index++) { var link = 'http://api.jquery.com/ajaxStop/'; var data={i:index} get_ajax(link,data,function(status, data){ console.log(index) if(size>max-2){ callback('done') } size++ }) } } run_list_ajax(function(info){ console.log(info) }) <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
To expand upon Alex's answer, I have an example with variable arguments and promises. I wanted to load images via ajax and display them on the page after they all loaded. To do that, I used the following: let urlCreator = window.URL || window.webkitURL; // Helper function for making ajax requests let fetch = function(url) { return $.ajax({ type: "get", xhrFields: { responseType: "blob" }, url: url, }); }; // Map the array of urls to an array of ajax requests let urls = ["https://placekitten.com/200/250", "https://placekitten.com/300/250"]; let files = urls.map(url => fetch(url)); // Use the spread operator to wait for all requests $.when(...files).then(function() { // If we have multiple urls, then loop through if(urls.length > 1) { // Create image urls and tags for each result Array.from(arguments).forEach(data => { let imageUrl = urlCreator.createObjectURL(data[0]); let img = `<img src=${imageUrl}>`; $("#image_container").append(img); }); } else { // Create image source and tag for result let imageUrl = urlCreator.createObjectURL(arguments[0]); let img = `<img src=${imageUrl}>`; $("#image_container").append(img); } }); Updated to work for either single or multiple urls: https://jsfiddle.net/euypj5w9/
I found simple way, it using shift() function waitReq(id) { jQuery.ajax( { type: 'POST', url: ajaxurl, data: { "page": id }, success: function(resp) { ........... // check array length if not "0" continue to use next array value if(ids.length) { waitReq(ids.shift()); // 2 ) }, error: function(resp) { .................... if(ids.length) { waitReq(ids.shift()); ) } }); } var ids = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; // shift() = delete first array value (then print) waitReq(ids.shift()); // print 1
My solution is as follows var request; ... 'services': { 'GetAddressBookData': function() { //This is the primary service that loads all addressbook records request = $.ajax({ type: "POST", url: "Default.aspx/GetAddressBook", contentType: "application/json;", dataType: "json" }); }, ... 'apps': { 'AddressBook': { 'data': "", 'Start': function() { ...services.GetAddressBookData(); request.done(function(response) { trace("ajax successful"); ..apps.AddressBook.data = response['d']; ...apps.AddressBook.Filter(); }); request.fail(function(xhr, textStatus, errorThrown) { trace("ajax failed - " + errorThrown); }); Worked quite nicely. I've tried a lot of different ways of doing this, but I found this to be the simplest and most reusable. Hope it helps
Look at my solution: 1.Insert this function (and variable) into your javascript file: var runFunctionQueue_callback; function runFunctionQueue(f, index, callback) { var next_index = index + 1 if (callback !== undefined) runFunctionQueue_callback = callback; if (f[next_index] !== undefined) { console.log(index + ' Next function avalaible -> ' + next_index); $.ajax({ type: 'GET', url: f[index].file, data: (f[index].data), complete: function() { runFunctionQueue(f, next_index); } }); } else { console.log(index + ' Last function'); $.ajax({ type: 'GET', url: f[index].file, data: (f[index].data), async: false, complete: runFunctionQueue_callback }); } } 2.Buil an array with your requests, like this: var f = [ {file: 'file_path', data: {action: 'action', data: 'any_data}}, {file: 'file_path', data: {action: 'action', data: 'any_data}}, {file: 'file_path', data: {action: 'action', data: 'any_data}}, {file: 'file_path', data: {action: 'action', data: 'any_data}} ]; 3.Create callback function: function Function_callback() { alert('done'); } 4.Call the runFunctionQueue function with parameters: runFunctionQueue(f, 0, QuestionInsert_callback); // first parameter: array with requests data // second parameter: start from first request // third parameter: the callback function
$.when doesn't work for me, callback(x) instead of return x worked as described here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/13455253/10357604
The below solution worked for me using $when $.when(master.GetStateByName(stateName)).done(function(response) { if (response) { } }); GetStateByName: function(stateName) { return $.ajax({ type: 'POST', url: getStatesByName + '?stateName=' + stateName, async: false, }); }
This is working for me It's very simple return $.ajax({ type: 'POST', url: urlBaseUrl data: {someData:someData}, dataType: "json", success: function(resultData) { } });
Try this way. make a loop inside java script function to wait until the ajax call finished. function getLabelById(id) { var label = ''; var done = false; $.ajax({ cache: false, url: "YourMvcActionUrl", type: "GET", dataType: "json", async: false, error: function (result) { label='undefined'; done = true; }, success: function (result) { label = result.Message; done = true; } }); //A loop to check done if ajax call is done. while (!done) { setTimeout(function(){ },500); // take a sleep. } return label; }
Delay ajax request before their resolution
I have a serie of ajax request which are all waited to be resolved before continuing (achieved with $.when().then()): function myfunc(offset) { // setTimeout(function(){ return $.ajax({ url:"https://www.URL.com", crossDomain: true, dataType: "jsonp", success: function (response) { // console.log(response); data = data.concat(response); }, error: function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) { // handle errors } }); // },offset/10);- } $.when( // call all ajax requests myfunc(0) ,myfunc(2500) ,myfunc(5000) ,myfunc(7500) ,myfunc(10000) ,myfunc(12500) ,myfunc(15000) ,myfunc(17500) ) .then(function() { // when all the ajax requests are terminated console.log(data); }); I would like to delay them a little bit to make it "more likely" that they end in some order. (Cf. commented setTimeout in the code above). I don't want to execute the first ajax request and then the second and then the third. They should just start with ~250ms delays one from another. But my attempt only results in the promise to be resolved immediately, without the ajax request being completed and thus an empty data. Is there a way to set a timeout and don't loose the wait for the ajax resolution? Or should I structure my code differently?
Like Rory I'm a bit skeptical about the usefulness of doing it, but if you want to do it, you'd do it by returning your own promise that you resolve in the ajax callback: function myfunc(offset) { var d = $.Deferred(); // Create "Deferred" object setTimeout(function(){ return $.ajax({ url:"https://www.URL.com", crossDomain: true, dataType: "jsonp", success: function (response) { // console.log(response); data = data.concat(response); d.resolve(); // Resolve it }, error: function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) { // handle errors d.reject(); // Reject it } }); },offset/10); return d.promise(); // Return its promise }
Based on the above code and what it looks like you are doing (joining a bunch of responses in a specific order)... you could try something like below instead: urlArr = [ "http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts", "http://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/comments" ]; function joinResponses(arr) { var promises = arr.map(function(url) { return $.ajax(url).then(function(res) { return JSON.stringify(res); }); }) return $.when.apply($,promises).then(function() { var joined = ""; for(var i = 0; i<arguments.length;i++) { joined += arguments[i]; } return joined; }); } joinResponses(urlArr).then(function(myJoinedResponses) { document.write(myJoinedResponses); }) <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script> Based on what you are asking for though it sounds rather strange and it seems like you could be doing something better.
Rory point is very good, but in case you want to do it anyway.. I'd do something like that. var arrayFunc = [func1, func2, func3] for (var i = 0; i < arrayFunc.length; i++) { (function() { var j = i; setTimeout(() => { arrayFunc[j](); }, i * 2500); })(); } Working Fiddle edit: setTimeout function edit2: Fixed the closure error
jQuery run function after $.each ajax request has completed
I had a simple script working using Promises in ECMA6 but I'm now converting what I wrote to jQuery to be compatible for all browsers but the issue I'm having is that availableDevices contains an array of AJAX responses rather an array of product names like the script is telling it to. Basically when all AJAX requests inside $.each have finished, I need to run a function with that data. What am I missing? (It's been a while since I wrote anything with jQuery...) var availableDevices = []; $.each(products, function (index, product) { availableDevices.push($.ajax({ type: 'GET', url: 'http://localhost:1337/api/product_availability?__url_path_param=' + formatProductName(product.product_name), complete: function (response) { if (response.status == 200) { return formatProductName(product.product_name); } } })); }); $.when(availableDevices).then(function (data) { console.log(data); });
There is no need to store the result of each call inside a separate array, you have access to each response via the then method: var requests = []; $.each(products, function (index, product) { requests.push($.ajax({ type: 'GET', url: 'http://localhost:1337/api/product_availability?__url_path_param=' + formatProductName(product.product_name) })); }); $.when.apply($, requests).then(function() { console.log(arguments.length + " results returned"); for(var i=0;i<arguments.length;i++){ var arg = arguments[i]; console.log(arg); } }); Live example (using jsfiddle json echo for demo): http://jsfiddle.net/vzq4Lwm8/ Having read your comment, there is a better solution, using a combination of $.Deferred() and the complete function on an $.ajax call: var deferreds = $.map(products, function (product) { var formattedProduct = formatProductName(product) var defer = $.Deferred(); $.ajax({ type: 'GET', url: 'http://localhost:1337/api/product_availability?__url_path_param=' + formattedProduct, complete: function (response) { if (response.status == 200) { defer.resolve(formattedProduct); } else{ defer.resolve(null); } } }) return defer; }); $.when.apply($, deferreds).then(function() { console.log(arguments.length + " results returned"); var availableProducts = $.map(arguments, function(x) { return x }); // availableProducts will only contain items which returned 200 response }); Live demo: http://jsfiddle.net/vzq4Lwm8/1/
Your call to $.when doesn't have the correct syntax as you're providing an array to it. Also, when using this pattern you will have to merge all the responses together and use that in the then() handler. Something like this: var requests = []; var data = []; $.each(products, function (index, product) { requests.push($.ajax({ type: 'GET', url: 'http://localhost:1337/api/product_availability?__url_path_param=' + formatProductName(product.product_name), success: function (response) { // note you're not actually using the `response` var here at all...? return data.push(formatProductName(product.product_name)); } })); }); $.when.apply($, availableDevices).then(function() { console.log(data); });
jQuery $.ajax() can use a parameter which is success that calls a function when the ajax request has finished successfully, as you can see in the docs So your code should be: $.each(products, function (index, product) { availableDevices.push($.ajax({ type: 'GET', url: 'http://localhost:1337/api/product_availability?__url_path_param=' + formatProductName(product.product_name), complete: function (response) { if (response.status == 200) { return formatProductName(product.product_name); } }, success:function(){ } })); });
JQuery Deferred how to use resolve and promise to determine function end
I have a in an html page that I'd like to show a spinner on while a JQuery function is running. Since its asynchronous I am trying to use deferred to determine when the function completed the code in the html page var req = jslongfunc(value); req.done(function( response){ spinner.stop(); }); The code in the JS page that contains jslongfunc function jslongfunc() { rdef = $.Deferred(); $.getJSON('mycode, function(data){ ... do lots of stuff here ... }); setTimeout(function () { r.resolve(); }, 4500); return r.promise(); The spinner seems to run for 4500 regardless of when the jslongfunc finished all its code. I know when it finishes because it draws something. I thought r would return and .done would execute if the function finished before the time out. What am I doing wrong?
Your promise is resolving only when your setTimeout function is calling r.resolve() after 4500ms. You need to call r.resolve() when all your stuff is done. Maybe something like this... // function definition var jslongfunc = function(defr) { //... do lots of stuff here ... defr.resolve(); } // promise helper var promise = function (fn) { var dfd = $.Deferred(fn); return dfd.promise(); } // init the deferred by using the promise helper above and then attach 'done' callback to stop spinner var rdef = promise(jslongfunc).done(function (response) { spinner.stop(); }).fail(function (response) { // handle promise failure. }); Update Well now that you put up your using $.getJSON you can do the following. function jslongfunc(value) { var jqxhr = $.getJSON(url, function (data) { // THIS IS YOUR FIRST promise callback // do some stuff with the json you just got }); // return the promise return jqxhr; } // now handle the spinner stoppage jslongfunc(value).done(function () { spinner.stop(); }).fail(function (data) { // handle function failure here });
Here is a little FIDDLE that I use to hit the Google financial API for stock quotes. I've added the Ajax events beforesend, complete that turns some gears off and on (very short period of time for this call). But it will probably give you a start. Edit: Here's a second FIDDLE with more compact code. JS $('.putmehere1').hide(); var quotevalue; var symboltopass = "NYSE:SDY"; $.ajax({ type: "GET", url: "https://finance.google.com/finance/info", async: false, dataType: 'JSONP', data: { client: 'ig', q: symboltopass } }) .done( function(data){ var stockInfo = data[0]; console.log( data[0] ); quotevalue = stockInfo.l; $('.putmehere2').html( '#2 - ' + quotevalue); }); $.ajax({ beforeSend: function(){ $('.putmehere1').show(); }, complete: function(){ $('.putmehere1').hide(); } });
sequential function call, while one of them uses setTimeout
I want to call three functions someTask1, someTask2 and someTask3 in that order. However, the function someTask2 involves Ajax call, and keep calling itself recursively using setTimeout unless a desired value is return. The code looks like this: doListOfTasks: function(myparam){ var someObj = someTask1(myParam); someTask2(someObj); someTask3(someObj); }, someTask2: function(someObj){ $.ajax({ url: "someUrl.do", type: "POST", data: ({"id": rowObject.instanceId}), dataType: "json", async:false, success: function(res){ if(res.prop1 != 'desired'){ setTimeout(function(){someTask2(someObj);}, 2000); } } } ); }, As you might have guessed, the execution of this code does not wait for someTask2 to return before calling someTask3. I want the code inside doListOfTasks to be executed sequentially. How can I do that? Also, I do not want to hard-code someTask3 in success callback. E.g. I do not want to do this: success: function(res){ if(res.prop1 != 'desired'){ setTimeout(function(){someTask2(someObj);}, 2000); }else{ someTask3(someObj); } } How can achieve this? Thanks Edit#1 The problem is not being able to call the functions... but the problem is synchronization. I want someTask2 to finish whatever it's doing, and only then someTask3 is called. someTask2 calls itself repetitively using setTimeout... I guess this triggers a new thread and someTask2 is returned after first call... triggering someTask3 in main thread. However, separate thread spawns (and gets killed) in each call setTimeout until the desired criteria is met. That's why, while the someTask2 still looping, the call to someTask3 triggers. Not sure how correct I am.
You can achieve this using a Deferred in jquery: $.when(someTask1(), someTask2(), someTask3()).then(successFunc, errorFunc); You need to return a custom made .Deferred object with a promise value. someTask2: function(someObj) { var def = $.Deferred(); $.ajax({ url: "someUrl.do", type: "POST", data: ({"id": rowObject.instanceId}), dataType: "json", async:false, success: function(res){ if(res.prop1 != 'desired'){ setTimeout(function(){someTask2(someObj);}, 2000); } else { def.resolve(res); } } } ); return def.promise(); } So for example: function someTask1() { var def = $.Deferred(); def.resolve('i\'m data resolved from task1'); return def.promise(); } function someTask2(someObj) { var def = $.Deferred(); var count = 0; var f = function() { console.log(++count); if (count > 2) { def.resolve('whoop we got the value we wanted in task 2 after many tries: ' + count); } else setTimeout(f, 1000); }; f(); return def.promise(); } function someTask3() { var def = $.Deferred(); def.resolve('and hello from task3!'); return def.promise(); } var success = function(x) { console.log('success:', arguments); }; var error = function() { console.log('oh no an error occured in one of the tasks.'); }; $.when(someTask1(), someTask2(), someTask3()).then(success , error); Will show 1 2 3 success: ["i'm data resolved from task1", "whoop we got the value ...k 2 after many tries: 3", "and hello from task3!"] fiddle available: http://jsfiddle.net/garreh/29SW7/
You could pass a callback to someTask2. For example: someTask2: function(someObj, callback){ $.ajax({ url: "someUrl.do", type: "POST", data: ({"id": rowObject.instanceId}), dataType: "json", async:false, success: function(res){ if(res.prop1 != 'desired'){ setTimeout(function(){someTask2(someObj, callback);}, 2000); } else { if (callback != null) { callback(); } } } } ); } Then just pass someTask3 as the callback: someTask2(someObj, function (){ someTask3(someObj); });