I have a JavaScript widget which provides standard extension points. One of them is the beforecreate
function. It should return false
to prevent an item from being created.
I've added an Ajax call into this function using jQuery:
beforecreate: function (node, targetNode, type, to) {
jQuery.get('http://example.com/catalog/create/' + targetNode.id + '?name=' + encode(to.inp[0].value),
function (result) {
if (result.isOk == false)
alert(result.message);
});
}
But I want to prevent my widget from creating the item, so I should return false
in the mother-function, not in the callback. Is there a way to perform a synchronous AJAX request using jQuery or any other in-browser API?
beforecreate
.
From the jQuery documentation: you specify the asynchronous option to be false to get a synchronous Ajax request. Then your callback can set some data before your mother function proceeds.
Here's what your code would look like if changed as suggested:
beforecreate: function (node, targetNode, type, to) {
jQuery.ajax({
url: 'http://example.com/catalog/create/' + targetNode.id + '?name=' + encode(to.inp[0].value),
success: function (result) {
if (result.isOk == false) alert(result.message);
},
async: false
});
}
You can put the jQuery's Ajax setup in synchronous mode by calling
jQuery.ajaxSetup({async:false});
And then perform your Ajax calls using jQuery.get( ... );
Then just turning it on again once
jQuery.ajaxSetup({async:true});
I guess it works out the same thing as suggested by @Adam, but it might be helpful to someone that does want to reconfigure their jQuery.get()
or jQuery.post()
to the more elaborate jQuery.ajax()
syntax.
Excellent solution! I noticed when I tried to implement it that if I returned a value in the success clause, it came back as undefined. I had to store it in a variable and return that variable. This is the method I came up with:
function getWhatever() {
// strUrl is whatever URL you need to call
var strUrl = "", strReturn = "";
jQuery.ajax({
url: strUrl,
success: function(html) {
strReturn = html;
},
async:false
});
return strReturn;
}
All of these answers miss the point that doing an Ajax call with async:false will cause the browser to hang until the Ajax request completes. Using a flow control library will solve this problem without hanging up the browser. Here is an example with Frame.js:
beforecreate: function(node,targetNode,type,to) {
Frame(function(next)){
jQuery.get('http://example.com/catalog/create/', next);
});
Frame(function(next, response)){
alert(response);
next();
});
Frame.init();
}
function getURL(url){
return $.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: url,
cache: false,
async: false
}).responseText;
}
//example use
var msg=getURL("message.php");
alert(msg);
Keep in mind that if you're doing a cross-domain Ajax call (by using JSONP) - you can't do it synchronously, the async
flag will be ignored by jQuery.
$.ajax({
url: "testserver.php",
dataType: 'jsonp', // jsonp
async: false //IGNORED!!
});
For JSONP-calls you could use:
Ajax-call to your own domain - and do the cross-domain call server-side Change your code to work asynchronously Use a "function sequencer" library like Frame.js (this answer) Block the UI instead of blocking the execution (this answer) (my favourite way)
Note: You shouldn't use async: false
due to this warning messages:
Starting with Gecko 30.0 (Firefox 30.0 / Thunderbird 30.0 / SeaMonkey 2.27), synchronous requests on the main thread have been deprecated due to the negative effects to the user experience.
Chrome even warns about this in the console:
Synchronous XMLHttpRequest on the main thread is deprecated because of its detrimental effects to the end user's experience. For more help, check https://xhr.spec.whatwg.org/.
This could break your page if you are doing something like this since it could stop working any day.
If you want to do it a way that still feels like if it's synchronous but still don't block then you should use async/await and probably also some ajax that is based on promises like the new Fetch API
async function foo() {
var res = await fetch(url)
console.log(res.ok)
var json = await res.json()
console.log(json)
}
Edit chrome is working on Disallowing sync XHR in page dismissal when the page is being navigated away or closed by the user. This involves beforeunload, unload, pagehide and visibilitychange.
if this is your use case then you might want to have a look at navigator.sendBeacon instead
It is also possible for the page to disable sync req with either http headers or iframe's allow attribute
I used the answer given by Carcione and modified it to use JSON.
function getUrlJsonSync(url){
var jqxhr = $.ajax({
type: "GET",
url: url,
dataType: 'json',
cache: false,
async: false
});
// 'async' has to be 'false' for this to work
var response = {valid: jqxhr.statusText, data: jqxhr.responseJSON};
return response;
}
function testGetUrlJsonSync()
{
var reply = getUrlJsonSync("myurl");
if (reply.valid == 'OK')
{
console.dir(reply.data);
}
else
{
alert('not valid');
}
}
I added the dataType of 'JSON' and changed the .responseText to responseJSON.
I also retrieved the status using the statusText property of the returned object. Note, that this is the status of the Ajax response, not whether the JSON is valid.
The back-end has to return the response in correct (well-formed) JSON, otherwise the returned object will be undefined.
There are two aspects to consider when answering the original question. One is telling Ajax to perform synchronously (by setting async: false) and the other is returning the response via the calling function's return statement, rather than into a callback function.
I also tried it with POST and it worked.
I changed the GET to POST and added data: postdata
function postUrlJsonSync(url, postdata){
var jqxhr = $.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: url,
data: postdata,
dataType: 'json',
cache: false,
async: false
});
// 'async' has to be 'false' for this to work
var response = {valid: jqxhr.statusText, data: jqxhr.responseJSON};
return response;
}
Note that the above code only works in the case where async is false. If you were to set async: true the returned object jqxhr would not be valid at the time the AJAX call returns, only later when the asynchronous call has finished, but that is much too late to set the response variable.
With async: false
you get yourself a blocked browser. For a non blocking synchronous solution you can use the following:
ES6/ECMAScript2015
With ES6 you can use a generator & the co library:
beforecreate: function (node, targetNode, type, to) {
co(function*(){
let result = yield jQuery.get('http://example.com/catalog/create/' + targetNode.id + '?name=' + encode(to.inp[0].value));
//Just use the result here
});
}
ES7
With ES7 you can just use asyc await:
beforecreate: function (node, targetNode, type, to) {
(async function(){
let result = await jQuery.get('http://example.com/catalog/create/' + targetNode.id + '?name=' + encode(to.inp[0].value));
//Just use the result here
})();
}
This is example:
$.ajax({
url: "test.html",
async: false
}).done(function(data) {
// Todo something..
}).fail(function(xhr) {
// Todo something..
});
Firstly we should understand when we use $.ajax and when we use $.get/$.post
When we require low level control over the ajax request such as request header settings, caching settings, synchronous settings etc.then we should go for $.ajax.
$.get/$.post: When we do not require low level control over the ajax request.Only simple get/post the data to the server.It is shorthand of
$.ajax({
url: url,
data: data,
success: success,
dataType: dataType
});
and hence we can not use other features(sync,cache etc.) with $.get/$.post.
Hence for low level control(sync,cache,etc.) over ajax request,we should go for $.ajax
$.ajax({
type: 'GET',
url: url,
data: data,
success: success,
dataType: dataType,
async:false
});
this is my simple implementation for ASYNC requests with jQuery. I hope this help anyone.
var queueUrlsForRemove = [
'http://dev-myurl.com/image/1',
'http://dev-myurl.com/image/2',
'http://dev-myurl.com/image/3',
];
var queueImagesDelete = function(){
deleteImage( queueUrlsForRemove.splice(0,1), function(){
if (queueUrlsForRemove.length > 0) {
queueImagesDelete();
}
});
}
var deleteImage = function(url, callback) {
$.ajax({
url: url,
method: 'DELETE'
}).done(function(response){
typeof(callback) == 'function' ? callback(response) : null;
});
}
queueImagesDelete();
Because XMLHttpReponse
synchronous operation is deprecated I came up with the following solution that wraps XMLHttpRequest
. This allows ordered AJAX queries while still being asycnronous in nature, which is very useful for single use CSRF tokens.
It is also transparent so libraries such as jQuery will operate seamlessly.
/* wrap XMLHttpRequest for synchronous operation */
var XHRQueue = [];
var _XMLHttpRequest = XMLHttpRequest;
XMLHttpRequest = function()
{
var xhr = new _XMLHttpRequest();
var _send = xhr.send;
xhr.send = function()
{
/* queue the request, and if it's the first, process it */
XHRQueue.push([this, arguments]);
if (XHRQueue.length == 1)
this.processQueue();
};
xhr.processQueue = function()
{
var call = XHRQueue[0];
var xhr = call[0];
var args = call[1];
/* you could also set a CSRF token header here */
/* send the request */
_send.apply(xhr, args);
};
xhr.addEventListener('load', function(e)
{
/* you could also retrieve a CSRF token header here */
/* remove the completed request and if there is more, trigger the next */
XHRQueue.shift();
if (XHRQueue.length)
this.processQueue();
});
return xhr;
};
Since the original question was about jQuery.get
, it is worth mentioning here that (as mentioned here) one could use async: false
in a $.get()
but ideally avoid it since asynchronous XMLHTTPRequest
is deprecated (and the browser may give a warning):
$.get({
url: url,// mandatory
data: data,
success: success,
dataType: dataType,
async:false // to make it synchronous
});
Success story sharing
async: false
is deprecated. If you use it, you will see the following message in the console: "Synchronous XMLHttpRequest on the main thread is deprecated because of its detrimental effects to the end user's experience. For more help xhr.spec.whatwg.org"https://www.taniarascia.com/how-to-promisify-an-ajax-call/
Also you can usejqxhr
variable which is returned or you can create a promise at the point of Invocation & call the function within that.