Page A:
$(document).ready(function () {
bindData();
});
function bindData() {
$('#searchbtn').bind('click', function () { SearchResult(); });
}
function SearchResult() {
ajax call...
}
Page A HTML:
<input type="button" id="searchbtn" />
Page B Details---> this page comes after selecting a specific search result from page A search list
Back<br />
Now when I go back to the Page A I can see my search criteria's as they were selected but the result Div is gone. What I am trying to do is I want the search list to stay when the Page comes back.
I think what I can do here is some how call the searchbtn click event again when the page comes back so the list will come-up again. Can anyone tell me how to fire the searchbtn click event only when the page comes back from Page B. or point me in the right way of doing this..
Thanks
The Browser Back button has long been problematic with AJAX. There are scripts, workarounds, and techniques out there (depending on the framework that you want to use).
Since it appears that you are using jQuery (based on your posted JavaScript syntax), here is a link to another Stackoverflow post regarding back button jQuery plugins.
history.back() will return you to the last URL visited, meaning that any ajax calls made during the user's visit will not be automatically repeated. Your browser may automatically restore your form selections, but the SearchResults() function is only called by a click event, not a selection event.
You can bind URLs to ajax states using a framework like sammy.js. That way, history.back() would take you to a URL associated with SearchResults().
function bindData() {
var chkinput1 = $("input:checkbox[name=x]:checked").length;
var chkinput2 = $("input:checkbox[name=y]:checked").length;
if (chkinput1 > 0 && chkinput2 > 0) {
SearchResult();
}
$('#searchbtn').bind('click', function () { SearchResult(); });
}
I know this is the worst way to achieve this result but I think instead of using any other plugins to add complexity we will go with this for now. If anyone else is looking for the same question let me tell you again this is not the best practice as on returning back to the history we are calling the search result again depending upon the cached input selection of checkboxes and generating the whole ajax call again to display the list. On the first request I am caching the list and setting sliding expiration so its not taking anytime to comeback and so everyone lives happily.
Related
We want to have a back button in our site
but history.back in javascript does not help us.
We need this function only run on the site and if the user comes from other site, clicking the return button on the previous site should not return.
In fact, we want a return button to run on our site only.
my code is
<i class="fas fa-arrow-left"></i><span class="btn-text">Back</span>
This only works for your own made back button and won't work with the browser back button
There is two ways to achieve that: a simple but not always reliable method and a complex one but always good.
1- The simple method
You use document.referrer and ensure the domain is yours before calling history.back().
2- The complex method
You could register a JavaScript function on page load to get the first URL the internaut land which you could store using history.pushState. Before calling the back function, you could ensure this is not that page. Though, this idea is not complete as the user could probably have landed on this page twice. i.e. Home->Product->Home. I'll let you search for further code that would let you counter this problem.
This code checks the history of back button of the browser on its click event:
$('#backbtn').click(function () {
if (document.referrer.includes(window.location.hostname)) {
window.history.back();
} else {
window.location.href = "/your/path";
}
});
I am having problem in overriding the pagination code given by grid. What I need to do is kind of hack the pagination given by my grid.
We are having a lot of records. So, what we are doing we are loading records to a threshold limit.
So, lets assume the threshold limit is 50 and page size is 10 so there will be 5 pages. So, when user comes to 5th page next button provided by the grid will be disabled.
So, what we need to do we need to make it enable and if user clicks on it I need make ajax call and load another 50 records(threshold limit) in the grid.
After that I need to disable this event so that next time user clicks it should not do the make ajax call and it should work like previously (by going from 1st page to 2nd page and so on)
All the above things mentioned I am able to do. But here problem comes when user goes to 5th page and go back to some other page let say 3 without clicking next button. Now, after going to 3rd page
when user clicks on the next page button it is making ajax call as I have make the button enable when user comes to 5th page and provided a click event to it.
So even if I provide a condition to run only on when grid current page is 5 then also it is running because after going to 5th page I will make button enable and bind and event. So, as I provided the event it will run without even specifying the condition.
How do I make the click event work as default and only when the user is at 5 it will make the ajax call.
This is my code -
///grid Current page will tell us which page we are in the grid.
if(gridCurrentPage==5){
query(".dojoxGridWardButton").forEach(function(element) {
query(".dojoxGridnextPageBtnDisable").replaceClass("dojoxGridnextPageBtn", "dojoxGridnextPageBtnDisable");
query(".dojoxGridlastPageBtnDisable").replaceClass("dojoxGridlastPageBtn", "dojoxGridlastPageBtnDisable");
});
callNextButton(gridCurrentPage)
}
And this is the function.
function callNextButton(gridCurrentPage) {
var target = dojo.query(".dojoxGridnextPageBtn");
var signal = on(target, "click", function(event){ ///Adding click event
if (gridCurrentPage ==5 ) {
var deferred = new dojo.Deferred();
setTimeout(function() {
deferred.callback({
called: true
})
}, 2000);
if (checking some conditions) {
////////doing Ajax call
deferred.then(function() {
//calling a callback
})
},
error: function(e) {}
};
})
signal.remove(); //Removing click event
}
Note : My grid is enhanced grid which is part of dojo toolkit. But probably its a design issue so, any comments/advices are welcome.
I really need an advice here. Please anyone can find the problem where it is it will be reqlly helpful.
I've been looking at how to automate actions on a webpage with PhantomJS, however I'm having issues manipulating the page to do what I want it to.
I'm using this as test site. I've managed to get Phantom to open the webpage and scrape the random sentence from the #result span. But now what I want to do is get another sentence without re-launching the script. I don't want to close and re-open the page as Phantom takes ages to launch the webkit and load the page. So I thought I could get another sentence by getting Phantom to click on the 'Refresh' button below the sentence box. Here's what I have at the moment:
var page = require('webpage').create();
console.log("connecting...");
page.open("http://watchout4snakes.com/wo4snakes/Random/RandomSentence", function(){
console.log('connected');
var content = page.content;
var phrase = page.evaluate(function() {
return document.getElementById("result").innerHTML;
});
console.log(phrase);
page.includeJs("http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.6.1/jquery.min.js", function() {
page.evaluate(function() {
$("frmSentence").click();
});
});
var content = page.content;
var phrase = page.evaluate(function() {
return document.getElementById("result").innerHTML;
});
console.log(phrase);
phantom.exit();
});
As you can see I'm trying to click the refresh button by using a .click() function, but this isn't working for me as I still get the same sentence as beforehand. Given the HTML for the button:
<form action="/wo4snakes/Random/NewRandomSentence" id="frmSentence" method="post" novalidate="novalidate">
<p><input type="submit" value="Refresh"></p>
</form>
I'm not sure what I should be referencing in the script to be clicked on? I'm trying the form ID 'frmSentence' but that isn't working. I'm wondering if .click() is the right way to go about this, is there some way for Phantom to submit the form that the button is linked to? Or maybe I can run the associated script on the page that gets the sentence? I'm a bit lost on this one so I don't really know which method I should go with?
You have a problem with your control flow. page.includeJs is an asynchronous function. If you have some other statements page.includeJs, they are likely executed before the script is loaded and the callback is executed. It means in your case that you've read the sentence 2 times before you even trigger a click.
If you want to do this multiple times, I suggest to use recursion since you cannot write this synchronously. Also, since you want this to be fast, you cannot use a static setTimeout with a timeout of 1 second, because sometimes the request may be faster (you lose time) and sometimes slower (your script breaks). You should use waitFor from the examples.
Instead of loading jQuery every time, you can move page.includeJs up and include everything else in its callback. If you only need to click an element or if jQuery click doesn't work (yes, that happens from time to time), you should use PhantomJS; click an element.
web scraping is about sending require information to a web server and get the result. It is not about behaving like a user clicking button or entering search criteria.
All you need to do in this example is send a POST request to http://watchout4snakes.com/wo4snakes/Random/NewRandomSentence. The result is just text in page.content, it does not even need to evaluate. So to get more than one sentence you just need to do a loop of page.open
I have the 2 sets of code:
Saves the data
myapp.activeDataWorkspace.ProjectHandlerData.saveChanges();
2.Refreshes the page
window.location.reload();
is there a way to make both of these work together on one button, as currently when i click save, the browser recognizes the changes and the (are you sure you want to leave the page) message or something along those lines pops up..
cheers
This is for the HTML client, right?
Assuming that is the case:
saveChanges() is an asynchronous operation, so you'd want to do:
myapp.activeDataWorkspace.ProjectHandlerData.saveChanges().then(function () {
window.location.reload();
});
That way it will wait until it is finished saving the changes before it reloads the screen.
However, there is a smoother way to do it, at least from the user perspective it's smoother.
On the edit screen, leave the Save method out, let LightSwitch handle that. When the user clicks save, it will close the edit screen, and go back to where they were before. Using the options parameter of the showScreen method, we can change that behavior.
Change the method that calls the edit screen like this:
myapp.showEditProject(screen.Project, {
afterClosed: function (editScreen) {
myapp.showViewProject(editScreen.Project);
}
});
This way, after the edit screen is closed, and it has handled the save changes operation for you, the application will automatically navigate to the details view screen of the recently edited item.
If you are instead wanting to refresh the browse screen after adding a new entity:
myapp.showAddEditProject(null, {
beforeShown: function (addEditScreen) {
addEditScreen.Project = new myapp.Project();
},
afterClosed: function () {
screen.Projects.load();
}
});
Those two options, beforeShown and afterClosed, give you a lot of really cool abilities to influence the navigation in your application.
I have learnt that you can save from a add/edit window, and reload the main page you are going back to by doing the following:
For Example: (adding an order to an order screen)
click on your button to add the order
enter the details required.
hit your custom save button with your validation included.
before your commitChanges(); write in the following line: screen.OrderLine.OrderTable.details.refresh(); "This needs applying to your scenario"
when you return to your screen your details should have been updated (for example the total value now displays the correct value in my case)
hope this helps...
hi here is the problem: my url is like this
http://somesite.com?theSearch=someword&a=b&c=d
on this page search results are displayed and on this page i have put the functionality of ajax search i.e. the results are updated without the page reload but the problem is if the user clicks on any link on the page and then presses the back button he results on the page page with the search results of "someword" not the new word typed (i mean the word for which the ajax results were updated) the client complains it and i need to fix it anyone have a solution?
i am using jQuery
You can't change the location.href without a new load. What you can do is set the hash.
Every time you make a search change the hash
function doSearch(searchword) {
location.hash = searchword;
//your search code
}
Now the hash will refer to the latest search. And then add this code to "override" the get parameter ?theSearch=.
$(document).ready(function() {
if(location.hash.length>0) {
doSearch(location.hash);
}
});
Its not a nice solution since you will load 2 search results, but it will work.
You can try Sammy. It utilizes the URL hash (#) so you can create single page applications that still respond to the back button in your browser, just like facebook. And it runs on jQuery.