JQuery :: How To See Requests Of Form At Firebug
May 4, 2011I can't see the requests of the forms by firebug to debug. Does anyone know if have any option or any way to do this?
View 3 RepliesI can't see the requests of the forms by firebug to debug. Does anyone know if have any option or any way to do this?
View 3 RepliesI have a problem where if a form submission (set up to submit via AJAX) fails validation, the next time the form is submitted, it doubles the number of post requests - which is definitely not what I want to happen. I'm using the jQuery ValidationEngine plugin to submit forms and bind validation messages to my fields. This is my code below. I think my problem is that I need to unbind from the validationEngine plugin when the form fails, but I can't figure out how to do this.
[Code]...
It looks like IE is caching the response for some AJAX requests here. The app I'm working on is a catalog of sorts. Clicking the link for a category loads a set of "items". Those, in turn, may be deleted from the admin view. The delete works fine (I checked the DB) but, when loading the same set of category items, I'm seeing the list unchanged. That is, the thing that was deleted is still there. Sorry for the crap explanation but I'm not really sure of a better way of putting it. Bottom line is, has anyone seen this sort of behavior with IE before? Can it cache the result of an AJAX request like that? And, if so, how can I guard against that? Can I set cache-control headers for an AJAX request?
View 2 Replies View RelatedI'm using jQuery Validate to validate my on-line things.it looks like a plugin issue, but my turn-arround was on ajax/param not on the plugin, so i put it on core.Today i faced a problem, that is: i use remote validation and i needed that all the form is submited to the validation. (this remote validation is like a bridge to the $.ajax)i have tried this, and of it is not the best deal, because it get the form on ready and don't change when the form change:
$('#nome').rules('add',
{
remote:
[code]....
Can I do the following without my program crashing? [code]...
I have created an application that does something similar to the code I just posted. However, my program crashes intermittently. Sometimes it will crash after calling jQuery.get() a few times (with several http requests still pending). Other times it will get through all of them just fine.
I want to know if Ajax can handle that many asynchronous requests without crashing? Can someone look at this to see if there is something I am missing?
Very intermittently, I am finding ajax requests submitted with jquery are being submitted twice, once with parameters, and once without parameters. The code looks something like this:
[Code]...
I was wondering if the jquery out of the box allows for repeated ajax requests at a certain time interval to update elements on the page. I found a plug in that can do this:Just wanted to make sire i can ot inherently do it with jquery.
View 6 Replies View RelatedI'm trying to launch two ajax requests at same time. I'm expecting result from the first later than the second. The problem is, it won't return me any result from the second request untill first one is returned.
Check it out :
$.post("sendMail.php");
getSendInfo();
setTimeout(getSendInfo,5000);
[code]....
I'm getting response from the $.getJSON function only when the $.post is over. Is this a bug or a mistake from me ? My aim is to launch a long request and fire multiple other requests to check how is doing the first one.
I'm having problems performing a simple load(...) request to bring in HTML content from a partner Oracle system within the same domain. Our portal has a built-in SO connection will handles security for me transparently. However during the process it initiates a 302 temporarily moved response which seems to trip up an AJAX request, but doesn't trip up Firefox when accessed through the address bar. If I use the same URL in an IFRAME it's totally fine.
After tons of googling, searching the forums, and the bug tracker database I cannot find anyone who has experienced this problem. Before I open a bug ticket I'd like community feedback to help me see if I am doing anything wrong.
My AJAX call looks like this in Javascript:
I have a element when click, it will trigger some other elements to be selected. and those elements will trigger elements in next level.
It is a three levels hierarchy so to speak. but each element will send an ajax request when selected. Those requests will become out of control especially when I repeatedly click the root element.
Can I queue those XHR request in a queue and send them one by one? or maybe add a delay before send so that they can collect their information into one batch request and send one request after that.
I have a page that relies on AJAX for content manipulation. Once a person selects a radio button, a request is made through $.getJSON() to get the replacement content. This works in all browsers. Once the new content is loaded, there are 3 more calls to $.getJSON() to change more content (on other tabs in jQuery UI). This works in all browsers except for IE.
I understand this is a Microsoft problem, and not a jQuery problem, but I am wondering if there is a way to manipulate the jQuery calls to get them to work in IE. I did try replacing $.getJSON with $.ajax, and even set async to false. None of those three methods worked in IE. I noticed the problem when my loading div was still displayed in IE. Using Firebug Lite, I saw that only one request was made, rather than four.
I am developing a fairly complicated application with a lot of JavaScript and making use of JQuery. The application repeatedly makes simultaneous GET requests.
I am looking for a way of assigning a unique token to each request when it is made, so that I can store information about that request and cache the request / response combo, when using $.get() (or potentially $.ajax() if required for the extra functionality).
So far I have not had any joy and after a while googling this am none the wiser. I have used similar functionality in Flex 3 with the AsyncToken object which can maintain data between HTTP request / response.
[Code]...
I'm rookie when it comes to Ajax and jQuery an..The following url produces an xml-file that I want to use on my page:When I use firebug it seems like nothing comes back. What have I done wrong?
This is what my code looks like:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
[code]....
I'm working on a php/jQuery application, I want to display a loading image automatically every ajax request, without writing code for every ajax request. Is there anyway to do this.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI founded a error in jQuery, with my code. I can't understand the origin of this error: b is undefined
gb=/,/;R=Array.prototype.slice;var Ia=...=0,e=this.length;f<e;f++){d=b.length;
There is the two files used:
scripts.js
/**
* Lollabot JQuery
* last update: 10/09/2010
[Code].....
I'm trying to output things to the Console to track errors but everytime I try:
console.log(values);
it says "Console is not Defined"
I have a basic html page
Code HTML4Strict:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">[code]....
I'm downloading jQuery and specifying it using the src attribute on the scropt tag from http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.6.2.min.js and i'm getting that error.I've tried downloading jQuery and saving it locally and that works. However if i use the CDN it's giving me that error on firebug.
I'm coding a simple hover-opacity thing for some images on my site on the navigation bar. Although I'm receiving this message in my Firebug. uncaught exception: Syntax error, unrecognized expression: . Here's the navigation code:
[Code]....
When a pending ajax request is aborted in IE browsers there is a new global object called "jQuery" + timestamp, for example "jQuery16405272192696596443".
This happens in every IE from 6 to 9 but not in Chrome, Safari, FireFox in their current stable versions. I am a bit lost and found nothing similar. I created a little test page to determine whether it started due to some own code or just in this little piece.
Example HTML:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
[Code].....
I have a number of javascript files. Some my own and some which I got off the net in my application. First, there's jquery and then a bunch of plugins and finally, my own scripts to bind all the correct elements and get the page ready.
For some strange reason, none of the scripts get loaded when I load the page. However, once I open firebug to try to see what's happening, it works fine.
Can you see an ajax call in Firebug when using $.getJSON? If so, does it return the jsonobject correct? Maybe there are some enters or something in front of the json?
View 4 Replies View RelatedHere's a demo of the work I have at the moment: [url]
Basically if you click on "Blog" in the main navigation column, a second column next to it will Ajax loads "blog.html" that contains a list of "posts." If you click on one of the posts in the second column, a third column will load in with the content of the post.
While that's working fine, if you click "Blog" again, this is where the script goes haywire. Firebug shows over 20 GET requests on the second column. And then when you click on a link in the second column after that, an equal amount of GET requests is sent. You can even see the animations going crazy. I have no idea why this is happening.
It started to occur when I added the following lines to mainnav.js:
The reason why I added this was because I wanted to show the full slide out animation before the script Ajax loads another blog.html when "Blog" is clicked for the second time. Before I implemented the code above and loadContent function, the problem was that the slide out animation was cut off by the loading of the page. To prevent this, I thought using a callback function would work since callbacks occur after the animation is completed.
The only issue with this is that if you first load the page #listnav has no child elements. Therefore if you try using the following code:
...the callback function is never executed since there are no nav li elements until you click "Blog." That's why I tried to implement an if statement which checks if there are elements within #listnav, and it works fine on the first click, but any clicks after the script just bugs out.
[url]
The code:
When I go to the site using FF5 or Safari 5, everything pulls up great. When I try to open the page using FF3.6 or IE8 none of the classes show up, I then up Firebug or IE Developer toolbar and refresh and the xml appears without failing.
I've a technical problem, i use jQuery Form Plugin and it's working well except for upload file. Effectively after uploading file we can't see any response in firebug. (You can see an example in the official website of jquery form plugin [URL] And in the response i call a script with
<script src="script.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
My page get this file well but i have a javascript error on the "$" of
$(document).ready(function() {...
I am working on an ASP.NET application that make a lot of jquery and javascript calls and trying to optimize the client side code as much as possible. (This web application is only designed to run on special hardware that has very low memory and processing power.)
The profiler in firebug is great for figuring out what calls are taking up the most time. I have already optimized a lot of my selectors and it is much faster.
However the profile shows a lot of jquery error() calls. In the attached image of the firebug profile window you can see it was called 52 times, accounting for 15.4 of the processing time.
Is that normal for jquery to call its error() like that? My code works flawlessy, and there are no error messages in the firefox error console. It seems like that is a significant performance hit. Is there anyway to get more info on what the errors are?
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jquery_error.JPG
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Here's my code:
$( document ).ready( function(){
$('#get_metars').click( function(){
//var icao = $('#icaos').val();
[code]....