Basic questions about javascript - javascript

Please take a peek at the following code, which is in _form.html.erb:
<script>
function typeCatch(){
$.post("<%= update_readers_link_essay_path(#essay) %>");
$(this).off("keypress", typeCatch);//remove handler
}
$(function(){
("form#new_revision").on("keypress", typeCatch);
});
</script>
When the user starts typing in a form, the ajax request should be fired and update the readers list. However, the post request is not fired when I start typing in the form and I am trying to debug this problem.
Since I am not that familiar with javacsript yet, I would appreciate if you helped me clarify a few things.
a. For the second part, can I just do
$("form#new_revision").on("keypress", typeCatch);
without wrapping it with $(function() {} ?
b. Is there anything that I'm doing wrong? Since ajax call isn't fired, I must have made a mistake in the second part?
Additional Question
my_personal_chat.js (in app/assets/javascripts pipeline)
$(function() {
var pusher = new Pusher('app_key');
var channel = pusher.subscribe('presence-my-chat');
channel.bind('pusher:subscription_succeeded', function(members) {
$('#online_users').empty();
members.each(function(member){
addMember(member);
});
... other functions ...
});
This is how I implemented my chat feature, using Pusher. Since the channel is private, everytime I call var channel, an ajax call to POST /pusher/auth is invoked.
I found that every time I navigate to a different page, even when it's not where the chat feature is, POST /pusher/auth is called. Basically, every time my_personal_chat.js is loaded, the ajax call will be unnecessarily invoked.
Question: How do I prevent this from happening? my_personal_chat.js should only be loaded when I go to myapp.com/chat. Should I just pull out everything from the javascript file and put it inside chat.html.erb? Is that the conventional way of doing it?
to answer my own question: I moved the code from my_personal_chat.js to chat.js.coffee and deleted my_personal_chat.js. Now the javascript only gets loaded when users go to the chat page.

a. There are alternatives, but wrapping the code in $(function() {}) is one of the best ways to ensure that the code isn't executed until all the elements are loaded into the DOM. It's a jQuery feature.
b. ("form#new_revision").on("keypress", typeCatch); should be $("form#new_revision").on("keypress", typeCatch);. You're missing the $ at the beginning.

Related

Call to $.post() Jquery not passing parameters successfully

/**
* Created by quantumveil on 2/10/15.
*/
$(document).ready(function(){
$('a').on('click',function(){
//$href=$(this).attr('href');
//console.log($href);
var $convoid=$(this).attr('id');
console.log($convoid);
//$('#convoarea').load($href);
$.get('inbox.php',{convoid:$convoid},function(data){$('#convoarea').html(data);//the callback sets whati t had to
//now add the on click handler to send button
$('#send').on('click',function(){
var $msgbody=$('#sendbody').val();
console.log($msgbody);
///now what i have to do is sent this $msgbody to the inbox.php thru get k
$.post('inbox.php',{sendbody:$msgbody,convoid:$convoid},function(data){
$('#sendbody').before(data);
console.log('here'+$msgbody);
});//the callback function will append it to other messages :3
return false;
});
}//callback ends hre
);
return false;
});
//for send button
});
Hi. I'm trying to code a social networking site and I want the inbox to be responsive and dynamic. I've recently started learning Jquery for the purpose being. I've googled this before and found no help and so it brings me here on this community. The above Javascript/Jquery code is supposed to pass some post parameters when the SEND button is clicked. Another file, inbox.php, is to receive those and work appropriately. Now here's what bugs me. The callback function to $.post() is executed, so I'm assuming the parameters are being passed to inbox.php. But when I try accessing them in inbox.php using following line
if($msgbody=get_post('sendbody')&&$convoid=get_post('convoid'))
I only receive a value of 1 and not the message's actual body. Here's how the function get_post is defined
function get_post($var1){
if(isset($_POST[$var1])){$var=$_POST[$var1];
return filter($var);}
else return 0;
}
I've tried accessing them directly through $_POST['sendbody'] but an error of undefined index is being generated. Any help will be highly appreciated. (PS the other call to .get() in the beginning of this js file is passing the parameters so there's nothing wrong with file paths)
EDIT: It's fixed but I want an explanation. All I did was in the inbox.php changed the first line which was
if($msgbody=get_post('sendbody')
to
if(isset($_POST['sendbody'])$msgbody=$_POST['sendbody']
Now all I can wonder is if it has something to do with filter() function in the definition of my get_post() function. Anybody?

Call a PHP Link with Onclick

This isn't a duplicate question by any means and I have tried a lot finding solutions.So, please read it before down voting.
Background:
This application is like a note-taking web app where you can post/delete your notes.
Each item in the list has an id which is needed when making a delete call.
In my application, I have to delete individual items from a list which is generated by looping over a JSON response (by a REST API) using PHP.The JSON response can be obtained after successful login.
Question:
To implement delete functionality I have to send id of each of the items as a parameter to the rest api delete call.
So, for this I have to generate dynamic links of the form :
http://localhost/myfolder/api/notes/:id
which should be passed to the delete.php function (Which I have implemented in CURL).
I searched for possible ways :
Using a PHP function: It seems to be complex, however if there is some way to invoke a PHP function (the delete code using CURL) on click of a link (Which I found not possible as per some answers ?) this could be a great solution.
Using Javascript: I have to call a function upon click of link that sets a variable $_SESSION["id"] to the current item["id"] and then goes to delete.php where I use the $_SESSION variable to first set up the link and then use the CURL code.
I tried basic implementation using the second approach but I have hit a roadblock in this issue. It would be great if you could tell with a bit of code which approach should be followed or any other way to do this ?
This functionality is present in twitter/facebook and almost every such service, how do they implement this, the basic approach should be the same, right: Generate dynamic links and pass them to a php script on click ?
Basic Javasript approach :
<script>
<script>
var el = document.getElementById('del1');
el.onclick = del1;
function del() {
// I have to set $_SESSION here
return false;
}
</script>
echo "<a href=\"delete.php\" title=\"Delete\" id=\"del1\">";
//Here, I have to pass the item["id"] to the javascript function.
I had tried some other ways but I have modified the code a lot so, I can't post them. Thanks for your help.
Regarding #2, you can't access the user's session from Javascript, so that will not work.
My preferred way (if using jquery) is to put the id in a data attribute of the delete button (or the block as a whole). Then in the delete onclick function do something like
<div class="block" data-itemid="<?=$item['id']?>">
...
<div class="delete_button">Delete</div>
</div>
...
$('.delete_button').on('click',function(event) {
block = $(event).target.parent('.block');
itemid = block.data('itemid');
$.post('delete.php',[itemid: itemid]...);
});

Execute javascript inside the target of an Ajax Call Drag and Drop Shopping Cart without Server language

Well i wanna create an Ajax Drag and Drop Shopping cart using only javascript and ajax. Currently i'm using the example in this page as a stepping stone. Right now it's only with local jquery and it works fine but i want to make the cart work with ajax calls. Note that i do not want to use a server side language( like php, rubby, asp etc), only html and javascript.
My initial thought was that at the $(".basket").droppable i should add an ajax call to another html page containing the "server logic" in javascript, execute in that file all the necessary steps( like reading the get variables (product name, product id and quantity), set a cookie and then return an ok response back. When the server got the "ok" response it should "reload" the cart div with the updated info stored inside the cookie.
If this was with php i would know how to do it. The problem is that as far as i know, you can execute javascript once it reaches the DOM, but how can you execute that js from inside the page that isbeing called upon ? ( thanks to Amadan for the correction)
I've thought about loading the script using $.getScript( "ajax/test.js", function( data, textStatus, jqxhr ).. but the problem with that is that the url GET variables i want to pass to the "server script" do not exist in that page.
I havent implemented all the functionality yet as i am stuck in how to first achieve javascript execution inside an ajax target page.
Below is a very basic form of my logic so far
// read GET variables
var product = getQueryVariable("product");
var id = getQueryVariable("id");
var quantity= getQueryVariable("quantity");
//To DO
//--- here eill go all the logic regarding cookie handling
function getQueryVariable(variable) {
var query = window.location.search.substring(1);
var vars = query.split("&");
for (var i=0;i<vars.length;i++) {
var pair = vars[i].split("=");
if (pair[0] == variable) {
return pair[1];
}
}
alert('Query Variable ' + variable + ' not found');
}
Any help regarding this matter will be appreciated.
Note: Logic in simple words:
1)have an html page with products+cart
2)Have an "addtocart.html" with the "Cart Server Logic"( being the target of the ajax call when an item is dropped into the product.)
If you have some other idea on this, please enlighten me :)
thanks in advance
Foot Note-1:
if i try loading the scipt using
$("#response").load("ajax/addtocart.html?"+ $.param({
product: product,
id: id,
quantity:quantity
})
);
i get the alert about not being able to find the url parameters( something that i thing is normal as because the content is being loaded into the initial page, from which the request is started, there are no get parameters in the url in the first place)
The problem is that as far as i know, you cannot execute javascript contained in the target of an ajax call, as that page never reaches the browser interpreter.
This is either incorrect or misleading. The browser will execute any JavaScript that enters DOM. Thus, you can use $.load to load content and execute code at the same time. Alternately, you can use hacked JSONP to both execute code and also provide content as a JSON document.
EDIT: Yes, you can't get to the AJAX parameters from JavaScript. Why do you want to? Do you have a good reason for it, or is it an XY problem?
The way I'd do it is this:
$('#response').load(url, data, function() {
onAddedToCart(product, id, quantity);
});
and wrap your JS code in your HTML into the onAddedToCart function.
Depending on what exactly you're doing, it could be simplified even further, but this should be enough to cover your use case.

How to override variable parameter loaded from another script

I have a script that loads the code dynamically. It is kind of a search engine. When I press a search button, the action gets triggered and a new page opens with many parameters.
I want to override one of the parameters generated with the script in the new URL. JS code is quite big and hard to read, but I have found the important part in the Firebug DOM editor.
This is the pattern of the URL generated when you perform the search:
http://www.example.com/...?ParameterOne=123&ParameterTwo=Two&ThisParameter=Sth&ParameterFour=Four...
What I want to edit is "ThisParameter" and change its value. This is the part edited in the DOM that does what I want:
Foobar = {
_options: [],
...
var options = {"ParameterOne":123,"ParameterTwo":"Two","ThisParameter":"ABC","ParameterFour":Four,...}
...
And this is the output of "ThisParameter" when you choose "Copy path" in Firebug's DOM tab:
_options[0].ThisParameter
I am wondering it this is possible at all. What makes me think that it is, is the fact that I can change this parameter in Firebug and it works perfectly. So, if Firebug can edit it, there should be a way to influence it with another script.
Looking forward to any suggestions, thank you in advance!
Since you cannot edit the dynamic script you have the following options:
You have to try to give the script the correct input and hope it uses your value.
Add a script to the results page which will read the url and arguments, change it and redirect, as we discussed here. (If you put everything in functions it should not conflict with the dynamic script if the functions are uniquely named.)
You could try adding something like this jQuery code to the page with the search button:
$('input[name=search_button_name]').click(function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
var form_search = $('#search_form_id');
$('<input>').attr({
type: 'hidden',
name: 'ThisParameter',
value: 'SomethingElse'
}).appendTo(form_search);
f.submit();
});
You can override any js function and method, or wrap you code around it. The easiest thing would be to look at the code you get and once it gets loaded, you re-declare a method with your own functionality.
I you are trying to replace a parameter in a specific jquery request, you can even wrap around the jquerys ajax method:
var jquery_ajax = $.ajax
$.ajax = function(options){
// parse only a specific occurence
if(options.url.indexOf("example.com") > -1) {
// change the url/params object - depending on where the parameter is
options.params.ThisParameter = "My Custom value"
}
// call the original jquery ajax function
jquery_ajax(options);
}
But it would be a lot cleaner to override the method that builds the ajax request rather than the ajax request itself.
I would investigate further on the scope of the variable options (var options), is it global? i.e. if you type 'options' in the Firebug console, does it display its properties?
If so, you could then access it via your own script and change is value, e.g.
options.ThisParameter = 'my-own-value';
You might hook your script to the click event of the search button.
I hope this helps, it could be more specific maybe if you have some sample code somewhere.

ScriptManager.RegisterStartupScript Keeps adding script blocks multiple times

I have an update panel with a timer control set up to automatically check for some data updates every minute or so.
If it sees that the data updates, it is set to call a local script with the serialized JSON data.
ScriptManager.RegisterStartupScript(UpdateField, GetType(HiddenField), ACTION_CheckHistoryVersion, "updateData(" & data & ");", True)
where "data" might look something like
{
"someProperty":"foo",
"someOtherProperty":"bar",
"someList":[
{"prop1":"value"},
{"prop2":"value"}, ...
],
"someOtherList":[{},...,{}]
}
"data" can get quite large, and sometimes only a few items change.
The problem I am having is this. Every time I send this back to the client, it gets added as a brand new script block and the existing blocks do not get removed or replaced.
output looks something like this:
<script type="text/javascript">
updateData({
"someProperty":"foo",
"someOtherProperty":"bar",
"someList":[
{"prop1":"value"},
{"prop2":"value"}, ...
],
"someOtherList":[{},...,{}]
});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript">
updateData({
"someProperty":"foo",
"someOtherProperty":"bar",
"someList":[
{"prop1":"changed"},
{"prop2":"val"}, ...
],
"someOtherList":[{},...,{}]
});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript">
updateData({
"someProperty":"foos",
"someOtherProperty":"ball",
"someList":[
{"prop1":"changed"},
{"prop2":"val"}, ...
]
});
</script>
with a new script block being created every time there is a change in the data.
Over time the amount of data accumulating on the browser could get potentially huge if we just keep adding this and I can't imagine how most people's browser would take it, but I don't think it could be good.
Does anyone know if there is a way to just replace the code that has been sent back to the browser rather than continuously adding it like this?
I came up with a hack that seems to work in my situation.
I am using jQuery to find the script tag that I am creating and remove it after it has been called.
Here is an example:
First I generate a guid:
Dim guidText as string = GUID.NewGuid().ToString()
I create a function like the following:
function RemoveThisScript(guid){
$("script").each(function(){
var _this = $(this);
if(_this.html().indexOf(guid)>-1)
_this.remove();
});
}
Then I add the following code to my output string:
... & " RemoveThisScript('" & guidText & "');"
This causes jQuery to look through all the scripts on the page for one that has the GUID (essentially the one calling the function) and removes it from the DOM.
I would recommend to use web service with some webmethod which you will call inside window.setInterval. In success handler of your webmethod (on client side) you can just take response and do whatever you want with it. And it will not be saved in your page (well, if you will do everything wrong). Benefit is that you will minimize request size(updatepanel will pass all your viewstate data, which could be large enough) and will limit server resources usage (update panel is causing full page live cycle, suppose slightly modified, but anyway - all those page_load, page_init, etc...) and with web service you will only what you need.
Here is an article where you can see how it could be created and used on client side. Looks like good enough.

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