Codeigniter AJAX and POST - ajax

What is the best way to address an AJAX script that sends data to POST in codeigniter? Right now I am loading a view with the AJAX through $this->load->view('AJAX', $data); however there is no UI or user actions in the view. It's simply running through the script and returning POST data a little after the script loads. I receive the POST data in my model where I input the values into the DB and output some other values based on the data.
I need to open a real view, set metatags and re-direct the user to another website afterwards.
How do I address this?
The problem I'm facing is that I cannot open up another view because the AJAX view is the one that's in focus but I need this AJAX view to be temporary that basically does it's thing and sends to POST.
Is there any convention that I can lookup/research to what I'm describing? Let me know what kind of clarification is needed if any.

Some people like to write "ajax" controllers and post to them exclusively, but you don't need to do that. You can handle the request in the same controller that handles the non-ajax request. Personally, I exclusively return json, but you can return chunks of HTML if that works better for you.
Your exact problem is vague (actual code would help clarify), but I think you are on the wrong track. Don't use a view for processing anything ever. Use your Controller layer, this is for handling input and requests.
Example of controller method responding to either ajax or non-ajax request:
function edit_user()
{
$data['status'] = $this->user_model->save();
if ($this->input->is_ajax_request())
{
// return json string with our update status
// Something like: {"status":true}
echo json_encode($data);
exit;
}
// Load the non ajax view with the same data
$this->load->view('users/edit', $data)
}
$this->input->is_ajax_request() is a function of the Input class that reads $_SERVER['HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH'] and checks if it's value is XMLHttpRequest. This should only be true if it's an "ajax" request.
You can make life easier by wrapping this in a class or function. No matter what you decide to do, don't use the view layer for processing data.
I think my problem is, how do I address javascript without a view? how do I call the script and/or where do I put the JS code in the controller? I felt it was the wrong direction to address the code in a view but I didn't see how else to do it.
Whenever possible, you should put javascript code in a .js file and use a <script> tag to load it, in an HTML document. The only other exception is putting it in a "view" file (a file that's only purpose is to construct your final HTML output). In other words, follow the same rules of HTML as to where to put javascript, and follow the usual conventions of MVC of where HTML belongs (in the view). Javascript code does not belong in your controller. Javascript is not processing your data, it is sending the data to the server.
I need to open a real view, set metatags and re-direct the user to another website afterwards.
If you want to load a view, then redirect (after a certain amount of time I assume), you can do it with javascript or a <meta> tag (but don't use a meta tag, use js).

Related

Sinatra + Ajax to load dynamic content

I want to create a page with will be filled with dynamic info using Ajax (JQuery). The info will come from various GETs I need to do in other URLs.
I'll be using Sinatra + JQuery to to that, but as my WEB experience is almost null and don't have any idea how do to it right.
The requisites for this are:
Each time a GET completes, a new line of information should appear on the page.
If the GET could not be complete, a default info appear on the page.
My idea so far is to do something like this:
Have my controller performing each GET inside a thread.
Each time a thread ends, with success or not, I inform the view of the result and render a partial
I'll have as many partial as I need (for each GET I must do)
The first time I load the page I fill in the default info, them I update via AJAX with the successful GET responses
This does not seem the correct approach, so I'm asking someone that already did something similar or has more experience on this some help.
You start off with a simple get('/'){} route that holds the default message (or any other GET route). Then you have your other GET routes that you want to display on your default route. In Sinatra you can check whether a request is an xhr-request or not with a request.xhr? If you have an xhr request you return a json value to your view, otherwise reject the request or render a view with proper html. This is on your sinatra backend. In your views you can use JQuery or any other JS library or plain JS to handle asynchronous data requests. You can use the ajax function in JQuery to request data from your routes and then add them to your DOM. It's as simple as that :)
Now you will have to investigate on the JQuery site how to make ajax requests and how to append data to existing DOMs. That's all there is to it.

RedirectToAction MVC 3 after $.ajax call

From my view I am sending via $.ajax a JSON object to my controller to save it in the database.
If all succeeded i want to redirect to another action which will show a diferent view.
If i use this code:
return RedirectToAction("CreatePage", "Survey", new {id = question.PageId});
The execution goes to the Survey controller which returns a view but it is not shown.
I have read some post which said that it is not posible to redirect via ajax.
The solution I use so far is to redirect via javascript like this:
success: function (ret) {
window.location.href = "/Survey/CreatePage/" + $("#PageId").val();
}
Although this always works, sometimes i need to refresh the CreatePage view to show the last changes made.
Any idea of how to solve this problem better?
Thanks in advance
As mccow002 suggested, I wasn't really needing to make the call via AJAX for that part. After studying the solutions suggested, i realized that i could simple submit it in a form. My confusion came because I have a save and continue editing and a save. For the save and continue I use the AJAX call, but for the save option with the form being submitted is ok.
Thanks very much for your help.
Instead of redirecting to a new page, you can send a rendered html from .net code back to client and load that html in page, like this $("#main").load(renderedHtml).
But for refreshing the page you can write a simple script that run at specified intervals and refresh the page contens.
You could use [OutputCache] on the CreatePage action so that it doesn't cache the page or only caches for so long.
output caching

CodeIgniter jQueryUI dialog form example

I am trying to use CodeIgniter and jQuery-ui dialog to create a modal window with form to update user information.
The process should be like:
1. Press a button on a view page.
2. A modal window pops up.
3. Inside the window is a form that a user can fill.
4. If the user filled something before, the information should be shown in corresponding field
5. Click the update button on the modal window to save the changes to database.
Can anyone provide a good sample of this process?
I used ajax to pass the data but it didn't work when I was trying to update the data to the database. It would be nice if an example of how to pass data from ajax to php and how php handle that.
Thanks,
Milo
well the jquery bit for post(), get(), ajax() works the same in any measure you would normally use it.. key difference here is with CI you can't post directly to a file-name file-location due to how it handles the URI requests. That said your post URL would be the similar to how you would access a view file normally otherwise
ie: /viewName/functionName (how you've done it with controllers to view all along. post, get, ajax doesnt have to end in a extension. I wish I had a better example then this but I can't seem to find one at the moment..
url = '/home/specialFunction';
jQuery.get(url, function(data) {
jQuery("#div2display").html(data);
});
in the case of the above you notice despite it not being a great example that. you have the url with 2 parameters home and specialFunction
home in this case is the controller file for home in the control folder for the home file in views the specialFunction is a "public function" within the class that makes the home controller file. similar to that of index() but a separate function all together. Best way I have found to handle it is through .post() and a callback output expected in JSON cause you can form an array of data on the php side json_encode it and echo out that json_encode and then work with that like you would any JSON output. or if your just expecting a sinlge output and not multiples echoing it out is fine but enough of the end run output thats for you to decide with what your comfortable doing currently. Hopefully all around though this gives you some clairity and hopefully it works out for you.

update the row using ajax in cakephp

i am using cakephp in my project. in this at one section i need to update the particular row onclick of the image. using ajax. i used mootools as javascript library. so please help me how could i do this.
thanks in advance
Simply speaking:
Create a CakePHP controller action that performs the row update.
Determine the URL of the controller action you just created. (ie. /controllername/actionname)
Determine if you need to do a GET or POST request to this URL for it to work.
Put code in your view that attaches an "onclick" event that makes and AJAX (GET/POST) request to the above controller.
CakePHP has a javascript helper that traditionally produced Prototype code, but in v1.3 it is now able to produce code for other Javascript frameworks (such as Mootools, jQuery, etc.)
However, many suggest writing your javascript in javascript (eg. actually using the Mootools framwork), rather than writing your javascript in PHP (like using CakePHP's helper to produce Mootools code).
Either way, in your view you need to have something like: <?php echo $js->link(.. or <script>Moo.. or <a onclick="Moo.. to attach your Javascript to that link.
You may also wish for your controller action to return some sort of response indicating whether or not the row update failed or succeeded. In that case you need to make sure the CakePHP controller action you are calling has a view that outputs this. JSON seems to be the ideal format for this (eg. { success: true }), but you need to remember to turn off Cake's debug output. This response can be captured into a variable by your Mootools code where you can decide what to do with it (eg. displaying an error).
As i know most programmer work with protype.js library.
i am giving you link see
go to there

How to return a MVC View to a $.Ajax JSON POST

I am sending a $.Ajax POST to a MVC Controller function with parameters and returning a JasonResult successfully. What I need to happen is that the current View be returned (as if it was not a JSON request and I was returning the Viewdata). The Viewdata has been updated and the page needs to be redrawn.
In short, I want the MVC Action to respond back to the $Ajax request correctly, and then have the page redrawn using the updated Viewdata. Hope this makes sense, coming down with a bad cold.
Jason result, awesome.
It doesn't work like that i'm afriad, either you need to not use ajax, or you need to return data and handle it in jquery, or you need to return a partial view.
Partial view is probably the best solution, you can just return a chunk of html and stick it in ur site, very simple to use.

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