I'm so happy my jquery is dispatching a serverside script (ajax) and it is working I have verified in the database.Now I would like to provide some feedback to the user so first go will be alert, later I will do something snazzy.I am just getting head around jQuery, so please excuse noobness of question. I will think that either one or the other of these alerts below would fire, but neither of them do and nothing also logs in the console.
I am making a call to a php file which right at this minute has no validation, all validation is been done by the jquery form plugin. the validation (xss prevention soon to be implemented) in the thanks fails I want to stop the processing of the form i.e. stop the return of success.
I am looking to create a form in which, there will be multiple choices for the user to choose from. Each choice is a paragraph. The user will read the paragraphs and use the checkbox to choose which paragraph they prefer. There will be three sections of this type of choice field.the end, the user would have chosen three paragraphs, one in each field, in order to complete a one page essay. When it is complete, the user will see their essay, formatted and such and then will have the choice to save or print it out as a .pdf. Formatted just as they saw on their screen.
My app recently upgraded to 1.4 and as such started using the XMLHttpRequest in the success callback of the .ajax function however we been forced to roll back to 1.3.2 due to performance issues with IE7 (forced to use in a corporate environment) Is there any way to get access to the XMLHttpRequest after an ajax call? If not, would anyone be so kind as to point out if its possible to modify the 1.3.2 source to add the parameter to the success call back like in 1.4? I am hoping its a simple modification however I could be wrong. We are set to upgrade to the lastest jQuery when we get a browser upgrade to IE9 but that could be up to a year away and I would really like to continue to use the XMLHttpRequest in my app as its a lot faster than my old approach.
today I updated my Firefox from 3.5 to 4.0b3 and it seems that the AJAX success callback is not longer fired. Firebug shows the correct response but the function is never called. Is this a Problem of the FF Beta, or is Jquery responsible for this?
And i have gone through this forum and other forums for a simple fix ... since so many have had this problem..but i have nt found anything that seems to work hence i am posting this problem
I dont know what i am doign wrong i have used debugbar and i can seethe html content that comes back i have used fiddler and i see hte html content that comes back there....the xhr stat =200 so every thing is good..yet it doesnot replace the the content $("#updateroster").html(data).
I'm working with a few more variables than this, I'm working with 3 variables. What I'm wondering is should I use json_encode() on the php side. I will be using php validations, so I may return error messages in an array. How do I check whether I have error messages or true value.
I'd like to send in an associative array so I can have email = "error"; amongst a few others. So if email is the only one with error I will .append a message to the correct div id.
My web page consists of 3 js jquery.js, a.js and b.js. This js are in order one after the another as posted. I have ajax call in a.js $.ajax inside a function fun() and this function is getting called from b.js function fun()return the value objtained from ajax call.No here is the tricky thing. Everything executes fine but in my b.js from where i am calling fun i am not able to get the returned by fun;But if i simply have an alert box then i am able to get the value/I tried jquery ajax with asynch attribute as false But still no results
Maybe it isn't really best practice (as it turns out) to use both jQuery and Dojo in the same application, but there are things I like about both libraries (for example jQuery is faster with animations, while Dojo has interface objects I like better). Nonetheless, best practice or not, I use both and that seem to create some complications.
The first time I load content via AJAX with jQuery DOJO seems to properly parse the checkboxes, datetime pickers, etc. which are sent with the new HTML. However, it seems the second time the parser won't react. I'm calling dojo.parser.parse() every time I load content with jQuery's $.ajax call. So basically my code looks like this:
I'm doing a JSONP query of a Wordpress database. Example call:[URL].. This code returns the expected data when executed on my local server. It also returns the expected data when I upload it to one of my remote servers. But it fails when run from the root of the domain it's calling, [URL]... no data is returned. (Behavior is the same for latest versions of Firefox, Safari, Chrome.)
I think there's something really simple going wrong here but don't know what it is. The only clue I have is provided by Firefox: When run successfully, all of the GET's appear in the JS subpanel of NET. The failed calls, launched from the domain containing the database, are listed in the XHR subpanel with a status of "301 Moved Permanently".
I've noticed this weird behaviour of jQuery in Safari and Chrome (didn't test on Firefox as I'm using some webkit CSS extensions). After setting up the call like this:
If a timeout occurs (I switch the local webserver off), the 'success' method will be called! More than this in the textStatus parameter there is a string with "success" !!! The error handler doesn't even get called.... (As you may notice the only way I had to tell the problem, was to check the data param if it is null or 0 length. How can I avoid this?
When using .ajax, and when before I receive any data back from the server, I would like to call a function that could display some type of 'thinking' icon. In looking a the documentation I see there is a 'success', for when after receiving data back successfully, and an 'error', for obviously when something bad happens and need to error gracefully. I do not see something like a 'beforeSuccess' function that would allow me to specify, for example, to overlay a 'thinking icon' on top of a <div> after request is sent to the server and before I get any data back. I would assume this is a pretty standard necessity in ajax applications, and probably missing something here. How exactly is this done using the .ajax methods?
I would like to submit a form depending on the success data of an ajax post.
Below is my jquery code; as you see #theform is the main form and before submitting the form I need to check the availability of the the date and time and the room using$.ajax. However it doesn't submit the main form if the date, time and the room is available.
required=["txtCal_Event_CalendarID","txt_TreatmentRoom","txtTreatmentID","txtTreatmentTypeID","datepicker1","datepicker2","timepicker1","timepicker2"]; emptyerror="Please fill out this field.";
I'm using an .ajax() call to do a jsonp request to another domain. When the user is not logged in, however, the server will return a 401 error. Unfortunately, this causes my .ajax() call to fail _without_ calling the error callback. Is this a known bug? Here is my code:
I'm creating an AJAX user validation so that when a user types in a username, it checks it in the database to see if it exists. I want it to execute after the user finishes typing. I've tried using: $("#username_field").keyup(function(){ which works, but I don't want a query executed every time the users presses a key. I was wondering if there was a better way to do it. Meaning I what the check to be preformed after the user finishes typing.
I 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.
Could someone help me figure out why this AJAX request is not completed in Internet Explorer.
function openmanagegraphs() { document.getElementById('managegraphs').style.display = 'block'; var xmlhttp; if (window.XMLHttpRequest) { // code for IE7+, Firefox, Chrome, Opera, Safari xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
I have been trying to fix Ajax call for Chrome and Safari and going nowhere.Somehow when the request is sent to the server, UPC gets blank even though upc has some value.This works in Firefox and IE.