I'm new to AJAX and used the code from this SO answer here jQuery Ajax POST example with PHP to integrate with a form on a WordPress site. It works just fine, but i'm having trouble integrating it with jquery validation
I tried placing the javascript from the page above into the submitHandler function below
$("#my-form").validate({
submitHandler: function(form) {
**js from other page**
}
});
My form validates on the first click. Then if i type into the input and submit nothing happens, I have to click a second time for the form to submit properly with AJAX. Below is a jsfiddle. Any help is appreciated thanks.
A jsfiddle of my code thought it'll log an error to console since form.php isn't linked
The job of the submitHandler is to submit the form, not to register a form submit event handler.
The submitHandler is called when the formm submit event is triggered, in your case instead of submitting the form you were registering a submit handler so when the form submit event is triggered for the first time the form is not submitted. when it is fired for the second time first the submit event is processed by the validator then the handler you registered is fired which triggers the ajax request.
In the submitHandler you just have to sent the ajax request there is no need to register the event handler
$("#add-form").validate({
submitHandler: function (form) {
// setup some local variables
var $form = $(form);
// let's select and cache all the fields
var $inputs = $form.find("input, select, button, textarea");
// serialize the data in the form
var serializedData = $form.serialize();
// let's disable the inputs for the duration of the ajax request
$inputs.prop("disabled", true);
// fire off the request to /form.php
request = $.ajax({
url: "forms.php",
type: "post",
data: serializedData
});
// callback handler that will be called on success
request.done(function (response, textStatus, jqXHR) {
// log a message to the console
console.log("Hooray, it worked!");
alert("success awesome");
$('#add--response').html('<div class="alert alert-success"><button type="button" class="close" data-dismiss="alert">×</button><strong>Well done!</strong> You successfully read this important alert message.</div>');
});
// callback handler that will be called on failure
request.fail(function (jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
// log the error to the console
console.error(
"The following error occured: " + textStatus, errorThrown);
});
// callback handler that will be called regardless
// if the request failed or succeeded
request.always(function () {
// reenable the inputs
$inputs.prop("disabled", false);
});
}
});
Calling $("#add-form").submit(function(){...}) doesn't submit the form. It binds a handler that says what to do when the user submits the form. That's why you have to submit twice: the first time invokes the validate plugin's submit handler, which validates the data and runs your function, and the second time invokes the submit handler that you added the first time.
Don't wrap the code inside .submit(), just do it directly in your submitHandler: function. Change:
var $form = $(this);
to:
var $form = $(form);
You don't need event.PreventDefault(), the validate plugin does that for you as well.
$("#add-form").validate({
submitHandler: function (form) {
var request;
// bind to the submit event of our form
// let's select and cache all the fields
var $inputs = $(form).find("input, select, button, textarea");
// serialize the data in the form
var serializedData = $(form).serialize();
// let's disable the inputs for the duration of the ajax request
$inputs.prop("disabled", true);
// fire off the request to /form.php
request = $.ajax({
url: "forms.php",
type: "post",
data: serializedData
});
// callback handler that will be called on success
request.done(function (response, textStatus, jqXHR) {
// log a message to the console
console.log("Hooray, it worked!");
alert("success awesome");
$('#add--response').html('<div class="alert alert-success"><button type="button" class="close" data-dismiss="alert">×</button><strong>Well done!</strong> You successfully read this important alert message.</div>');
});
// callback handler that will be called on failure
request.fail(function (jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
// log the error to the console
console.error(
"The following error occured: " + textStatus, errorThrown);
});
// callback handler that will be called regardless
// if the request failed or succeeded
request.always(function () {
// reenable the inputs
$inputs.prop("disabled", false);
});
}
});
Related
I am using codeigniter framework. I am trying to call controller method using AJAX function call on dropdown change event. My code is:
$(document).ready(function() {
$("body").on('change', '#assettype_id', function(e) {
var categoryval = $('#assettype_id :selected').val();
// assettype_id is dropdown id. On change event of
// dropdown, controller method will be called
myurl = 'http://mylocalsite/index.php/controllername/controllermethod/' + $.now();
alert("category id = " + categoryval); // for testing
$.ajax({
cache: false,
type: 'POST',
data: {
id: categoryval
},
url: myurl,
dataType: 'html',
success: function(data1) {
alert("inside ajax call"); // for testing
$('#result').html("");
// result is a div tag used to display result//
$("#result").html(data1);
},
error: function(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
alert('error');
},
complete: function(xhr, status) {
alert("The request is complete!");
}
});
});
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
This code is working perfectly for initial 2 or 3 change events of dropdown and getting new output but after 2 or 3 selection from dropdown, won't get new result like AJAX method is not working.
I have put 2 alerts for checking. alert with message 'category id =' is calling on every change event of dropdown but alert with message "inside ajax call" is not showing after 2 or 3 selections of dropdown even not going to error section of AJAX call.
I would like to know what is going wrong here? Thank you for you help.
I simply want to use ajax to submit a form with an image from a phone.
If I use the below code as a simple function - the form data is not passed.
If I use the code as is - it works but the user has to click the submit button.
How do I either pass the FormData properly to a simple $.ajax({}); submit?
OR
How do I trigger the code below when a picture is taken or selected?
I have this - it works fine when user clicks submit:
// how do I trigger this when image file is selected?
$("#Upload_Form").submit(function(e){
e.preventDefault();
// OR - how do I get FormData with image without using: '$("#Upload_Form").submit(function(e)'
var formData = new FormData(this);
$.ajax({
// POST details are here etc.
});
});
Bind the change event for the file input like below and then trigger the submit event of the form or make an ajax call right away with the FormData see below demo.
If you want to know how to submit image using FormData and ajax see this answer
$("#my-form").on('submit', function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
// OR - how do I get FormData with image without using: '$("#Upload_Form").submit(function(e)'
var formData = new FormData(this);
console.log("sending Ajax call now");
$.ajax({
// POST details are here etc.
});
});
$("#my-file").on('change', function() {
//you can either trigger the form submit here
var form = $("#my-form");
$("#my-form").submit();
//OR
//use this to send the ajax call to upload the image
// var form=$("#my-form")[0];
// var formData = new FormData(form);
// $.ajax({
// type: "POST",
// url: 'your/url',
// data: formData,
// processData: false,
// contentType: false,
// success: function (data) {
// console.log("SUCCESS : ", data);
// },
// error: function (e) {
// console.log("ERROR : ", e);
// }
// });
})
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form id="my-form" enctype="multipart/form-data">
<input type="file" name="my-file" id="my-file" />
<input type="submit" name="submit" value="submit" />
</form>
Update
Note: if you want to use an ajax call to send the formData you need to set the processData and contentType to false. contentType: false only available from jQuery 1.6 onwards.
I'm using ajax to submit pages and return content blocks based on user action for an onboarding sequence.
If have a page which loads and get 1 content element, the user then clicks Yes or No, which loads the next content element into the same space (via ajax).
For some reason my selectors don't seem to be working on that ajax loaded html.
Here is my ajax function which gets the form:
$.ajax({
beforeSend: function() {
$("#loader").toggleClass('progress');
},
type: 'POST',
dataType: 'json',
data: data,
url: baseUrl+'welcome/user_confirmation_form',
complete: function( response ) {
$("#loader").toggleClass('progress');
},
success: function( response ) {
console.log(response);
$("div.welcome-page > .col").html(response.response);
},
error: function( response ) {
$("#next-steps").html(response.response);
}
});
I'm then trying to access the submit button (have tried doing it as a ahref and button type=submit but nothing seems to be selecting the event.
$('div.welcome-page').on('submit', "user_complete", function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
console.log('FOund form');
var user = $(this).serializeArray();
console.log(user);
});
If I view source, the ajax returned HTML is not even in the dom, but it is when viewing the UI normally.
I'm guessing this has something to do with it?
How can I select all the form data?
Any time I click on the button or ahref it just fires the same page again.
If user_complete is a class you are assigning on your submit button in your loaded html, then you are missing a .
$('div.welcome-page').on('submit', ".user_complete", function(e) {
But this will only work if you're using a submit action as this is listening for a submit event. Maybe you want to listen for a click event?
You need to bind the events to your handlers for your newly added HTML elements. Your original call to
$('div.welcome-page').on('submit' ...
Only bound the event handler for the elements that were on the page at that point in time.
You can put your handler into a function ...
var myHandler = function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
var user = $(this).serializeArray();
}
And then after you load the new HTML you need to bind the handler to the event. So, on success with the AJAX you would ...
success: function( response ) {
$("div.welcome-page > .col").html(response.response);
$('div.welcome-page').on('submit', "user_complete", myHandler);
},
Am using a plugin called "jQuery Autosize!" on my textareas. How can i make it autoresize my server side generated textareas because they generated when the page has already loaded.
This is the code that generates the server side textareas. resultErrorObj.node_html contains the server side generated textarea as shown below.
$(document).ready(function() {
$("#postUpdate").submit(function(event){
// setup some local variables
var $form = $(this),
// let's select and cache all the fields
$inputs = $form.find("input"),
// serialize the data in the form
serializedData = $form.serialize();
// let's disable the inputs for the duration of the ajax request
$inputs.attr("disabled", "disabled");
// fire off the request to /form.php
$.ajax({
url: base_url + "ajax/post_status_update",
type: "post",
data: serializedData,
// callback handler that will be called on success
success: function(response, textStatus, jqXHR){
var resultErrorObj = jQuery.parseJSON(response);
if (resultErrorObj.status == 1)
{ $(resultErrorObj.node_html).hide().insertAfter('#activitiesStream').slideDown('fast');
}
else
{
alert(resultErrorObj.error);
}
},
// callback handler that will be called on error
error: function(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown){
// the error
alert("Error here " + errorThrown);
},
// callback handler that will be called on completion
// which means, either on success or error
complete: function(){
// enable the inputs
$inputs.removeAttr("disabled");
}
});
// prevent default posting of form
event.preventDefault();
});
});
Thank you!
The website for Autosize (http://jacklmoore.com/autosize) shows that you can manually trigger the autosizing.
I have this ajax function which validates the user provided key. but the alert comes before the ajax response and due to which if the user provide a wrong key even can get access
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#submit').click(function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
var key = $('#downloadkey').val();
var dataString = {KEY:key};
$.ajax({
url: "/mediabox/home/validate_key",
type: 'POST',
data: dataString,
success: function(msg) {
if(msg=="true")
{
alert("do something");
}
else
{
alert("Your download key is either wrong or you didn't provide it.");
return false;
}
}
});
});
});
What makes you believe the alert is coming before the response? The success handler is only invoked after the response has been successfully received client-side.
To confirm, you can edit your success handler to log the response:
success: function(msg) {
console.log(msg);
if(msg=="true")
{
alert("do something");
}
else
{
alert("Your download key is either wrong or you didn't provide it.");
return false;
}
}
Also, if you're using the return false to deny access to the user by blocking the HTML action that, won't work due to the asynchronous nature of AJAX.
The success function is called when the request completes.
success(data, textStatus, jqXHR)Function, Array
A function to be called if the request succeeds. The function gets passed three
arguments: The data returned from the server, formatted according to
the dataType parameter; a string describing the status; and the jqXHR
(in jQuery 1.4.x, XMLHttpRequest) object. As of jQuery 1.5, the
success setting can accept an array of functions. Each function will
be called in turn. This is an Ajax Event.
The code within the success handler will only execute once the AJAX request is completed. If you are getting an alert before hand then that indicates that the request completed properly.