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- Ajax
- ####
- Actions
- =======
- From JavaScript we can execute actions via XHR POST operations. Here's an example action and script for some basic math:
- .. code:: php
- // in myplugin/actions/do_math.php
- if (!elgg_is_xhr()) {
- register_error('Sorry, Ajax only!');
- forward();
- }
- $arg1 = (int)get_input('arg1');
- $arg2 = (int)get_input('arg2');
- system_message('We did it!');
- echo json_encode([
- 'sum' => $arg1 + $arg2,
- 'product' => $arg1 * $arg2,
- ]);
- .. code:: js
- elgg.action('do_math', {
- data: {
- arg1: 1,
- arg2: 2
- },
- success: function (wrapper) {
- if (wrapper.output) {
- alert(wrapper.output.sum);
- alert(wrapper.output.product);
- } else {
- // the system prevented the action from running
- }
- }
- });
- Basically what happens here:
- #. CSRF tokens are added to the data.
- #. The data is posted via XHR to http://localhost/elgg/action/example/add.
- #. The action makes sure this is an XHR request, and returns a JSON string.
- #. Once the action completes, Elgg builds a JSON response wrapper containing the echoed output.
- #. Client-side Elgg extracts and displays the system message "We did it!" from the wrapper.
- #. The ``success`` function receives the full wrapper object and validates the ``output`` key.
- #. The browser alerts "3" then "2".
- elgg.action notes
- -----------------
- * It's best to echo a non-empty string, as this is easy to validate in the ``success`` function. If the action
- was not allowed to run for some reason, ``wrapper.output`` will be an empty string.
- * You may want to use the :doc:`elgg/spinner</guides/javascript>` module.
- * Elgg does not use ``wrapper.status`` for anything, but a call to ``register_error()`` causes it to be
- set to ``-1``.
- * If the action echoes a non-JSON string, ``wrapper.output`` will contain that string.
- * ``elgg.action`` is based on ``jQuery.ajax`` and returns a ``jqXHR`` object (like a Promise), if you should want to use it.
- * After the PHP action completes, other plugins can alter the wrapper via the plugin hook ``'output', 'ajax'``,
- which filters the wrapper as an array (not a JSON string).
- * A ``forward()`` call forces the action to be processed and output immediately, with the ``wrapper.forward_url``
- value set to the normalized location given.
- * To make sure Ajax actions can only be executed via XHR, check ``elgg_is_xhr()`` first.
- The action JSON response wrapper
- --------------------------------
- .. code::
- {
- current_url: {String} "http://example.org/action/example/math", // not very useful
- forward_url: {String} "http://example.org/foo", ...if forward('foo') was called
- output: {String|Object} from echo in action
- status: {Number} 0 = success. -1 = an error was registered.
- system_messages: {Object}
- }
- .. warning::
- It's probably best to rely only on the ``output`` key, and validate it in case the PHP action could not run
- for some reason, e.g. the user was logged out or a CSRF attack did not provide tokens.
- Fetching Views
- ==============
- A plugin can use a view script to handle XHR GET requests. Here's a simple example of a view that returns a
- link to an object given by its GUID:
- .. code:: php
- // in myplugin_init()
- elgg_register_ajax_view('myplugin/get_link');
- .. code:: php
- // in myplugin/views/default/myplugin/get_link.php
- if (empty($vars['entity']) || !$vars['entity'] instanceof ElggObject) {
- return;
- }
- $object = $vars['entity'];
- /* @var ElggObject $object */
- echo elgg_view('output/url', [
- 'text' => $object->getDisplayName(),
- 'href' => $object->getUrl(),
- 'is_trusted' => true,
- ]);
- .. code:: js
- elgg.get('ajax/view/myplugin/get_link', {
- data: {
- guid: 123 // querystring
- },
- success: function (output) {
- $('.myplugin-link').html(output);
- }
- });
- The Ajax view system works significantly differently than the action system.
- * There are no access controls based on session status.
- * Non-XHR requests are automatically rejected.
- * GET vars are injected into ``$vars`` in the view.
- * If the request contains ``$_GET['guid']``, the system sets ``$vars['entity']`` to the corresponding entity or
- ``false`` if it can't be loaded.
- * There's no "wrapper" object placed around the view output.
- * System messages/errors shouldn't be used, as they don't display until the user loads another page.
- * If the view name begins with ``js/`` or ``css/``, a corresponding Content-Type header is added.
- .. warning::
- Unlike views rendered server-side, Ajax views must treat ``$vars`` as completely untrusted user data.
- Returning JSON from a view
- --------------------------
- If the view outputs encoded JSON, you must use ``elgg.getJSON`` to fetch it (or use some other method to set jQuery's
- ajax option ``dataType`` to ``json``). Your ``success`` function will be passed the decoded Object.
- Here's an example of fetching a view that returns a JSON-encoded array of times:
- .. code:: js
- elgg.getJSON('ajax/view/myplugin/get_times', {
- success: function (data) {
- alert('The time is ' + data.friendly_time);
- }
- });
- Fetching Forms
- ==============
- If you register a form view (name starting with ``forms/``), you can fetch it pre-rendered with ``elgg_view_form()``.
- Simply use ``ajax/form/<action>`` (instead of ``ajax/view/<view_name>``):
- .. code:: php
- // in myplugin_init()
- elgg_register_ajax_view('forms/myplugin/add');
- .. code:: js
- elgg.get('ajax/form/myplugin/add, {
- success: function (output) {
- $('.myplugin-form-container').html(output);
- }
- });
- * The GET params will be passed as ``$vars`` to *your* view, **not** the ``input/form`` view.
- * If you need to set ``$vars`` in the ``input/form`` view, you'll need to use the ``("view_vars", "input/form")``
- plugin hook (this can't be done client-side).
- .. warning::
- Unlike views rendered server-side, Ajax views must treat ``$vars`` as completely untrusted user data. Review
- the use of ``$vars`` in an existing form before registering it for Ajax fetching.
- Ajax helper functions
- ---------------------
- These functions extend jQuery's native Ajax features.
- ``elgg.get()`` is a wrapper for jQuery's ``$.ajax()``, but forces GET and does URL normalization.
- .. code:: js
- // normalizes the url to the current <site_url>/activity
- elgg.get('/activity', {
- success: function(resultText, success, xhr) {
- console.log(resultText);
- }
- });
- ``elgg.post()`` is a wrapper for jQuery's ``$.ajax()``, but forces POST and does URL normalization.
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