I'm having trouble getting the correct scope within prototype's Ajax.Request class. What I'm trying to do is write a simple API which wraps ajax requests:
API = Class.create({
initialize:function(api_token)
{
this.api_token = api_token;
this.request_uri = new Template('/api/#{api_token}/#{resource}.json');
this.status = 0;
this.last_result = null;
},
some_api_call:function()
{
var result = this._request('resource', {'id':1});
// and so on...
},
_request:function(resource, params)
{
var uri = this.request_uri.evaluate({"api_token":this.api_token,"resource":resource});
new Ajax.Request(uri,
{
contentType:'application/json',
method:'get',
parameters:params,
onSuccess:function(r)
{
alert(this);
this.last_result = r.responseJSON;
this.status = r.status;
}
});
return this.last_result;
}
});
When I'm in the onSuccess() method I expected +this+ to refer to the parent object, but it is giving me DOMWindow. I can't seem to get that response data into the API class at all. I figure it is something stupid (binding?), but I just can't seem to think this one out today.
Thanks
Okay. I missed the bigger problem. I was requesting asynchronously so it was setting the result, just not immediately. To be fair, it was also a binding issue. Here is the proper request:
_request:function(resource, params)
{
var uri = this.request_uri.evaluate({"api_token":this.api_token,"resource":resource});
new Ajax.Request(uri,
{
asynchronous: false,
contentType:'application/json',
method:'get',
parameters:params,
onSuccess:function(r)
{
this.last_result = r.responseJSON;
this.status = r.status;
}.bind(this)
});
alert(this.status);
return this.last_result;
}
Your solution should NOT work?
You need to use local variables above the nested function and then convert them into the 'this' scope:
_request:function(resource, params)
{
var uri = this.request_uri.evaluate({"api_token":this.api_token,"resource":resource});
var last_result = "";
var status = "";
new Ajax.Request(uri,
{
asynchronous: false,
contentType:'application/json',
method:'get',
parameters:params,
onSuccess:function(r)
{
last_result = r.responseJSON;
status = r.status;
}
});
this.last_result = last_result;
this.status = status;
alert(this.status);
return this.last_result;
}
Related
I have a jQuery file which also uses unserscore.js. It controls the selections of dates and different venues. For one of the pages it also controls which visuals are displayed depending on the type of venue. I can successfully, using ajax, get the type of page, but I have been unable to pass that value to a public variable in the script. It is based on which WiFi spot the data is coming from. If the data is from a local spot the page should display a d3 bubble chart. If it's from a remote spot it should display a map of the venue. Currently I have the functionality working with hard coding based on the id of the venue which is far from ideal.In order to make the decision based on which spot the venue is using I created an ajax call that gets the "spot". With console.log I can see that I am getting the correct result from the ajax call, but I'm missing something in terms of passing that information to a variable so I can use it.
This is the complete jQuery files:
define([
"ui/selects",
], function (SelectsUiClass) {
var global = this;
var MainControlsClass = function () {
// Private vars
var _this = this,
_xhr = null,
_selects = new SelectsUiClass(),
_dateRangeSelect,
_venueSelect,
_floorSelect,
_zoneSelect;
// Public vars
this.Selects = null;
this.spotName = null;
// Private Methods
var _construct = function () {
_dateRangeSelect = _selects.InitSelect('#mainControls-dateRange', _onSelectChange);
_venueSelect = _selects.InitSelect('#mainControls-venue', _onSelectChange);
_floorSelect = _selects.InitSelect('#mainControls-floor', _onSelectChange);
_zoneSelect = _selects.InitSelect('#mainControls-zone', _onSelectChange);
var value = _this.GetVenue();
_getChartDisplayDiv(value);
};
var _getChartDisplayDiv = function (venueId) {
var path = window.location.pathname,
pathArray = path.split("/"),
page = pathArray[pathArray.length - 1];
console.log('controlsjs 36, navigation page: ' , page);
console.log('controlsjs 37, venue value: ' , venueId);
_this.Load(venueId);
console.log('Controls 40, sPot Name = ', _this.spotName);
if (page === 'heatmap') {
if (venueId === 8 || venueId === 354) {
//make the bubble div visible
$("#heatmap-bubble").show();
//make the map div invisible
$("#heatmap-map").hide();
} else {
//make the map div visible
$("#heatmap-map").show();
//make the bubble div invisible
$("#heatmap-bubble").hide();
}
}
}
this.Load = function (venueId) {
console.log("Controls 66, Venue Id sent = ", venueId);
if (_xhr) {
_xhr.abort();
_xhr = null;
}
_this.SetLoading(true);
_xhr = $.ajax({
url: $("meta[name='root']").attr("content") + '/app/heatmap/spot',
type: 'POST',
headers: {
'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content')
},
data: {
venue_id: venueId
},
dataType: 'JSON',
async: true,
cache: false,
error: function (jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
_this.SetLoading(false);
},
success: function (response) {
_this.SetLoading(false);
console.log("Controls 90, Response of ajax call = ", response);
_this.Update(response);
}
});
};
// Public functions
this.SetLoading = function (option) {
if (_.isUndefined(option)) { option = false; }
if (this.spotName) { this.spotName.SetLoading(option); }
};
this.Update = function (data) {
if (_.isUndefined(data) || _.isNull(data)) {
console.log('Controls 106: Spot Name: ', data)
this.spotName = data;
}
};
var _getVenueData = function (venueId) {
for (var i = 0; i < venuesData.length; i++) {
if (venuesData[i].id === venueId) {
if (!_.isUndefined(venuesData[i].spot_data)) {
return venuesData[i].spot_data;
}
}
}
};
var _onVenueChange = function () {
var value = _this.GetVenue();
if (_.isNull(value)) {
return;
}
_getChartDisplayDiv(value);
//_setSelectValue(_venueSelect, value);
var venueData = _getVenueData(value);
console.log('Venue data received: ', venueData);
if (!_.isUndefined(venueData) && !_.isUndefined(venueData.floors)) {
_selects.UpdateSelect(_floorSelect, venueData.floors);
_onFloorChange();
}
};
var _onFloorChange = function () {
var value = _this.GetFloor(),
zones = [];
if (_.isNull(value)) {
return;
}
//_setSelectValue(_floorSelect, value);
if (_.isNumber(value)) {
var venueData = _getVenueData(_this.GetVenue()),
floors = venueData.floors;
for (var i = 0; i < floors.length; i++) {
if (floors[i].id === value) {
zones = floors[i].zones;
}
}
}
_selects.UpdateSelect(_zoneSelect, zones);
};
var _onZoneChange = function () {
var value = _this.GetZone();
if (_.isNull(value)) {
return;
}
//_setSelectValue(_zoneSelect, value);
};
var _onSelectChange = function (e) {
var t = $(e.target),
id = t.attr('id');
if (_venueSelect && _venueSelect.attr('id') === id) {
_onVenueChange();
} else if (_floorSelect && _floorSelect.attr('id') === id) {
_onFloorChange();
} else if (_zoneSelect && _zoneSelect.attr('id') === id) {
_onZoneChange();
}
EventDispatcher.Dispatch('Main.Controls.Change', _this, {
caller: id
});
};
// Public Methods
this.GetDateRange = function () {
return _selects.GetSelectValue(_dateRangeSelect);
};
this.GetDateRangeKey = function () {
if (_dateRangeSelect) {
var selected = _dateRangeSelect.find('option:selected');
if (selected.length) {
return selected.attr("data-key") || "";
}
}
return "";
};
this.GetVenue = function () {
return _selects.GetSelectValue(_venueSelect);
};
this.SetVenue = function (value) {
_selects.SetSelectValue(_venueSelect, value);
}
this.GetFloor = function () {
return _selects.GetSelectValue(_floorSelect);
};
this.SetFloor = function (value) {
_selects.SetSelectValue(_floorSelect, value);
}
this.GetZone = function () {
return _selects.GetSelectValue(_zoneSelect);
};
this.SetZone = function (value) {
_selects.SetSelectValue(_zoneSelect, value);
}
this.GetData = function () {
return {
dateRange: {
date: this.GetDateRange(),
key: this.GetDateRangeKey()
},
venue: this.GetVenue(),
floor: this.GetFloor(),
zone: this.GetZone()
};
};
// Init
_construct();
};
return MainControlsClass;
});
The function that determines which visual to display is close to the top: _getChartDisplayDiv:
var _getChartDisplayDiv = function (venueId) {
var path = window.location.pathname,
pathArray = path.split("/"),
page = pathArray[pathArray.length - 1];
_this.Load(venueId);
console.log('Controls 40, sPot Name = ', _this.spotName);
if (page === 'heatmap') {
if (venueId === 8 || venueId === 354) {
//make the bubble div visible
$("#heatmap-bubble").show();
//make the map div invisible
$("#heatmap-map").hide();
} else {
//make the map div visible
$("#heatmap-map").show();
//make the bubble div invisible
$("#heatmap-bubble").hide();
}
}
}
When I am able to pass the "spot" information to it or a variable that it uses, it should look like this:
var _getChartDisplayDiv = function (venueId) {
var path = window.location.pathname,
pathArray = path.split("/"),
page = pathArray[pathArray.length - 1];
_this.Load(venueId);
console.log('Controls 40, sPot Name = ', _this.spotName);
if (page === 'heatmap') {
if (_this.spotName === 'local' ) {
//make the bubble div visible
$("#heatmap-bubble").show();
//make the map div invisible
$("#heatmap-map").hide();
} else {
//make the map div visible
$("#heatmap-map").show();
//make the bubble div invisible
$("#heatmap-bubble").hide();
}
}
}
My ajax call is here:
this.Load = function (venueId) {
console.log("Controls 66, Venue Id sent = ", venueId);
if (_xhr) {
_xhr.abort();
_xhr = null;
}
_this.SetLoading(true);
_xhr = $.ajax({
url: $("meta[name='root']").attr("content") + '/app/heatmap/spot',
type: 'POST',
headers: {
'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content')
},
data: {
venue_id: venueId
},
dataType: 'JSON',
async: true,
cache: false,
error: function (jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
_this.SetLoading(false);
},
success: function (response) {
_this.SetLoading(false);
console.log("Controls 90, Response of ajax call = ", response);
_this.Update(response);
}
});
};
This successfully gets the right spot, but I have been unable to pass it to a variable I can use. I think I am getting mixed up between private and public variables. I tried to use the 'this.Update' function to pass the setting to the public 'this.spotName' variable, but that comes up null. I have also tried to simply return the result of the ajax call, but I get a "not a function" error. How can I make the result of the ajax call available to my '_getChartDisplayDiv' function?
Your problem is that you are trying to read the value of _this.spotName before it is assigned. Let us walk through the steps that happen.
When you call _getChartDisplayDiv(value), the _getChartDisplayDiv function first calls _this.Load(venueId). Load, in turn, submits an ajax request with a success callback, reproduced in abbreviated form below:
this.Load = function (venueId) {
// ...
_this.SetLoading(true);
_xhr = $.ajax({
...
success: function (response) {
_this.SetLoading(false);
console.log("Controls 90, Response of ajax call = ", response);
_this.Update(response);
}
});
};
When the response arrives, the success callback will be invoked, which in turn will call _this.Update, which will set the variable you are after. The syntax you used for this purpose is correct. However!
"When the response arrives" happens to be an unpredictable event in the future. It might be after 10 milliseconds, it might take 2 seconds, or the request might time out altogether. Even 10 milliseconds is already an eternity, compared to the time it takes your browser to execute all other code in your script. You can be quite sure that by the time $.ajax returns, the success callback has not run yet.
When you pass a callback (success) to a function ($.ajax) and the callback is not run before the function returns, this is called an asynchronous callback, "async" for short. When a callback might be invoked async, it is important for the function to guarantee that it always runs async, because this type of situation needs to be handled in an entirely different way from when the callback is invoked synchronously (i.e., before the function returns). You can read more about the technicalities in this blogpost. So this is exactly what $.ajax guarantees: it will never invoke the success (or error) callback before it returns, even in the hypothetical situation that the response would arrive fast enough.
Right after $.ajax returns, your Load function returns, at which point your _getChartDisplayDiv function continues to execute. Almost immediately after that, you intend to read _this.spotName. $.ajax has already returned, so you might hope that at this point, the success callback has already been invoked.
Unfortunately for you, async callbacks are more stubborn than that. Not only does an async callback not run until the function to which you pass it returns; it does not run until any currently executing function returns. Besides $.ajax, Load needs to return, _getChartDisplayDiv needs to return, any function that was calling _getChartDisplayDiv needs to return, and so forth. The entire call stack needs to unwind. Only then (and when the response actually arrives, which is likely to be many milliseconds later) will the success callback be invoked. This game rule is called the event loop in JavaScript.
The solution is simpler than you might expect: you just need to invert the order of control. Rather than trying to force the data out of a request when you want to update the chart, you can update the chart when the response arrives, and rather than trying to update the chart directly, you can just trigger the request. Specifically in your case, you just need to make three changes:
In the places where you currently call _getChartDisplayDiv, call _this.Load instead.
Remove the line that calls _this.Load inside the _getChartDisplayDiv function.
At the end of the success handler, add a line that calls _getChartDisplayDiv.
Incidentally, using a proper application framework will make it much easier to manage this kind of thing. In your case, I recommend trying Backbone; it builds on top of Underscore and jQuery and it is unopinionated, so you can gradually adopt it without having to radically change the way you work.
I am not familiar with underscore.js. For jQuery you have two options, which you can use as an inspiration for your case. Untested code:
1. Callback function
You provide a callback function:
$('.mydiv').myPlugin({ // Pass options Object to plugin
venuId: '123',
getType: function(type) {
console.log(type); // Example accessing internal data
}
});
Your plugin code:
(function( $ ) {
$.fn.myPlugin = function(opt) {
this.filter('div').each(function() {
const settings = $.extend({
namespace: 'myPlugin',
type: 'local'
getType: function() {},
// otherSettings: 'as needed',
}, opt);
// plugin code here...
if(typeof settings.getType === 'function') {
settings.getType(settings.type);
}
});
return this;
};
}( jQuery ));
2. Plugin method
You define plugin method(s) that can be called:
$('#mydiv').myPlugin({ // Pass options Object to plugin
venuId: '123'
});
console.log($('#mydiv').myPlaugin('getType'));
Your plugin code:
(function( $ ) {
$.fn.myPlugin = function(opt) {
this.filter('div').each(function() {
const settings = $.extend({
namespace: 'myPlugin',
type: 'local',
// otherSettings: 'as needed',
}, opt);
this.getType = function() {
return settings.type;
}
let firstArg = arguments[0];
if(typeof firstArg === 'string') {
let func = this[firstArg];
if(typeof func === 'function') {
var args = [];
for(var i = 1; i < arguments.length; i++) {
args.push(arguments[i]);
}
return func.apply(this, args);
}
} else {
// plugin init code here...
}
});
return this;
};
}( jQuery ));
I'm running a Vue script with a text box and submit button, I'm calling an api to POST what I write in the textbox to the api and to return information back from the API, I'm getting this error mentioned in the title eventhough I've written the Javascript functions in vue as it should be?
With the script I'm first setting up a new XMLHttpRequest, initiating the header and api key for both GET and POST methods. I've then created 2 functions to get the data from the textbox and send them to the API, then making another button with the other function to send back the data.
I went through this approach because I kept getting a CORS issue and the API needed me to declare an access control origin header, is there anything I've done wrong with this code? Any help would be greatly appreciated
<script>
export default {
name: 'ProperForm'
}
methods: {
StartClient: function () {
this.get = function(Url, Callback){
var aHttpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest();
aHttpRequest.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (aHttpRequest.readyState == 4 && aHttpRequest.status == 200)
Callback(aHttpRequest.responseText);
}
aHttpRequest.open("GET", Url, true);
aHttpRequest.setRequestHeader("X-Api-Key", "eVnbxBPfn01kuoJIdfgi46TiYNv8AIip1r3WbjsX");
aHttpRequest.send(null);
}
this.post = function(Url, message, Callback) {
var aHttpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest();
aHttpRequest.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (aHttpRequest.readyState == 4 && aHttpRequest.status == 200)
Callback(aHttpRequest.responseText);
}
aHttpRequest.open("POST", Url, true);
aHttpRequest.setRequestHeader("x-api-key", "eVnbxBPfn01kuoJIdfgi46TiYNv8AIip1r3WbjsX");
aHttpRequest.send(message);
}
}
var client = new StartClient();
submitData: function () {
document.getElementById('inputBox').disabled = true;
var targetInputButton = document.getElementById("inputBox").value;
var message = '{"targetInputButton":"' + targetInputButton + '"}';
client.post('https://le75bkfcmg.execute-api.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/dev/start-trace', message, function(response) {
document.getElementById('jobId').innerHTML = response;
});
}
sendBackData: function () {
var jobId = document.getElementById("jobId").innerHTML;
var message = '{"jobId":"' + jobId + '"}';
client.post('https://le75bkfcmg.execute-api.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/dev/check-trace', message, function(response) {
document.getElementById('report').innerHTML = response;
});
}
}
</script>
New way I wrote var client:
StartClient: function () {
var client
},
You need put your methods object inside export and split the methods to comma
<script>
export default {
name: 'name',
methods:{
foo(){
},
bar(){
}
}
}
UPD: var client = new StartClient();
defined outside the method
I am sending a json in my server using vanilla JS and it returns a bad request, it seems the server only wants a key value pair like 'page=pageData&action=act', when i do this it works, but i would want to send data that way. Is there a way to make it possible?
When i try to make it in jquery it works fine.
$('.more-headlines').on('click', function() {
var pageData = $(this).data('page');
var pageURL = $(this).data('url');
var act = 'load_more';
var jsondata = {
page : pageData,
action : act
}
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('POST', pageURL, true);
xhr.setRequestHeader("Content-Type", "application/json;charset=UTF-8");
xhr.onload = function() {
if (xhr.status >=200 && xhr.status < 400) {
var data = JSON.parse(xhr.responseText);
console.log(data);
} else {
console.log('sad');
}
};
xhr.send(JSON.stringify(jsondata));
});
This is my code in jquery
$('.more-headlines').on('click', function () {
var that = $(this);
pageData = $(this).data('page');
newPage = pageData+1;
pageURL = $(this).data('url');
act = 'load_more';
that.addClass('icon-spin');
that.find('span').html('loading headline');
jsondata = {
page : pageData,
action : act
}
$.ajax ({
type: 'POST',
url: pageURL,
data: jsondata,
success: function(response) {
setTimeout( function () {
that.data('page', newPage);
$('#featureOnDemand ul').append(response);
that.removeClass('icon-spin');
that.find('span').html('See more headlines');
}, 500);
}
});
});
I looked at the network tab in chrome and i saw that the send request becomes a key value pair like 'page=pageData&action=act'.
I am stuck in this part because i want to make a vanilla js ajax request in my project. Any idea would be much appreaciated. Many thanks!
You want to serialize your object data. Here's a helper function you can pass your object into:
var serializeObject = function (obj) {
var serialized = [];
for (var key in obj) {
if (obj.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
serialized.push(encodeURIComponent(key) + '=' + encodeURIComponent(obj[key]));
}
}
return serialized.join('&');
};
I'm making a jquery library to use an application with the json rpc protocol but I'm stuck with a little problem.
This is the fiddle that shows the code (obviously it can't work): https://jsfiddle.net/L9qkkxLe/3/.
;(function($) {
$.lib = function(options) {
var outputHTML = [],
plugin = this;
var APIcall = function(api_method, api_params) {
request = {};
request.id = Math.floor((Math.random() * 100) + 1);
request.jsonrpc = '2.0';
request.method = api_method;
request.params = (api_params) ? api_params : [];
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "http://localhost:8898/jsonrpc",
data: JSON.stringify(request),
timeout: 3000,
beforeSend: function(xhr) {
xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization', window.btoa(options.username + ":" + options.password));
},
success: function(data) {
handleData(data, api_method);
},
error: function(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
log("Connection time out: can't reach it. Try changing the settings.");
isConnected = "false";
},
dataType: "json"
});
}
var handleData = function(data, method) {
if (method == "getgenres") {
outputHTML = data.result.genres; //I need data.result.genres to return in getgenres function
}
}
var log = function(msg) {
if (options.debug == true) console.log(msg);
}
plugin.getgenres = function() {
APIcall("getgenres");
return outputHTML; //This is sadly empty.
}
};
}(jQuery));
var init = new $.lib();
console.log(init.getgenres());
I need that the getgenres function returns data.result.genres but actually it returns an empty array because getgenres is called for first and only after the handleData function gives to outputHTML the value that I need.
You are performing an asynchronous AJAX request, which means you can't actually get back the data immediately. There are two ways to solve your issue: making it synchronous (easy but ill advised) or using a callback (a little bit more complex but generally accepted):
In your getgenres function, you could accept one more parameter: callback
plugin.getgenres = function(callback) {
/* Dont forget APIcall already took two parameters in, so callback has to be the third in line! */
APIcall("getgenres", false, callback);
}
Now modify your APIcall function to accept your callback:
var APIcall = function(api_method, api_params, callback) { ... }
And call the callback from the successful completion call - instead of having a handler method in between wrapped in a function, you can simply pass the anonymous function. So instead of success: function(data){ handle(data); }, just use:
success: callback
The anonymous function that we will pass to it will receive as its first parameter the data you were passing to the handler. Now you can do the following:
var myGenres = [];
var init = new $.lib();
init.getgenres(function(data){
/* Now your data is actually loaded and available here. */
myGenres = data;
console.log(myGenres);
});
I would like to point out that there are many better ways to handle this, including turning this into a Constructor (More here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Inheritance_and_the_prototype_chain) instead of the strange amalgamation of functions and variables you have now, as well as using JS Promises (here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise) to make this easier. But the basic gist should be here.
Update (potential implementation)
Because I mentioned that this could be done in a way that I think is clearer to read and use. I do not know all use cases for this, but from the provided example I would change the code to something looking like the following. Please also note I am not an expert on jQuery plugins, so I am avoiding plugging into jQuery and just using it as an easy AJAX call.
function getAjax(){
if(!window.jQuery || !window.$) throw("jQuery is required for this plugin to function.");
this.data = [];
this.request = '';
return this;
}
getAjax.prototype = {
createRequest : function(method, parameters){
this.request = {};
this.request.id = Math.floor((Math.random() * 100) + 1);
this.request.jsonrpc = '2.0';
this.request.method = method;
this.request.params = parameters || [];
return this;
},
callRequest : function(options, callback, error){
var self = this;
// We could also `throw` here as you need to set up a request before calling it.
if(!this.request) return this;
else {
$.ajax({
// We will allow passing a type and url using the options and use sensible defaults.
type: options.type || "POST",
url: options.url || "http://localhost:8898/jsonrpc",
// Here we use the request we made earlier.
data: JSON.stringify(this.request),
timeout: options.timeout || 3000,
beforeSend: function(xhr){
xhr.setRequestHeader(
'Authorization',
window.btoa( options.username + ":" + options.password)
);
},
// We will also store all the made request in this object. That could be useful later, but it's not necessary. After that, we call the callback.
success: function(data){
var store = {request:self.request, data: data};
self.data.push(store);
// Call the callback and bind `this` to it so we can use `this` to access potentially pther data. Also, pass the results as arguments.
callback(data, self.request.id).bind(self);
},
// Error function!
error: error,
dataType: options.dataType || "json"
});
}
return this;
}
}
// Example use
new getAjax().createRequest('getgenres').callRequest({
username: 'myusername',
password: 'mypassword'
}, function(data, id){
// Success! Do with your data what you want.
console.log(data);
}, function(e){
// Error!
alert('An error has occurred: ' + e.statusText);
console.log(e);
});
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.0/jquery.min.js"></script>
What I do in those occasions is this:
You are supplying a method. So put a reference to the a callback function. In this case plugin.getGenresFinalize. When handleData is called it will fire that callBack function. This way you can pass multiple methods to the api call for different types of data.
plugin.getgenres = function() {
APIcall(this.getgenresFinalize);
}
plugin.getgenresFinalize = function(data) {
console.log(data);
}
var handleData = function(data, method) {
method(data);
}
I have this:
var MyObject = {};
MyObject.doStuff = function(someParam) {
var webdav = new Webdav("addr","port");
var handler = {
onSuccess: MyObject.Success,
onError: MyObject.Fail
}
webdav.PUT(handler, filename, options);
}
MyObject.Success = function(result) {
alert('status ' + result.status + result.statusstring);
}
I'm using exo platform javascript library for webdav access (if it matters)
The handler I'm creating will call MyObject.Success if webdav.PUT is done succesfully. How can i send the someParam to that function too?
Put in another way, after a successful or failed operation, I'm interested in doing something with the someParam, depending of the result.
This may be what you'r looking for:
javascript callback function and parameters
or maybe:
http://onemarco.com/2008/11/12/callbacks-and-binding-and-callback-arguments-and-references/
var someParam = 'foo';
var handler = {
onSuccess: function(result) {success(result, someParam);},
onError: function() { fail(); }
}
You should look into javascript objects, and try to contain the code within one scope. Something like this:
var MyObject = {
var doStuff = function(someParam) {
var webdav = new Webdav("addr","port");
var handler = {
onSuccess: function(result) {success(result, someParam);},
onError: function() { fail(); }
}
webdav.PUT(handler, filename, options);
}
var success = function(result, someParam) {
alert('status ' + result.status + result.statusstring);
}
var fail = function() {}
this.doStuff = doStuff;
}
var myObj = new MyObject();
myObj.doStuff(param);
One simple way to do it, taking advantage of JavaScript closures:
var handler = {
onSuccess: function(result) { MyObject.Success(result, someParam); },
onError: MyObject.Fail
}