Is there a jQuery equivalent to this prototype code?
Ajax.Responders.register({
onException: function(x,y)
{
if(y.message!="Syntax error") new Insertion.After("toperrorbox","<p style='color:red'>"+y.message+"</p>");
}
});
Prototype's Ajax.Responders
are global listeners that listen to ALL ajax events. jQuery does indeed have an equivalent. The global Ajax Events.
The syntax is a little different, due to jQuery's nature, but something similar to this should do the trick:
$('#toperrorbox').bind('ajaxError', function (event, XMLHttpRequest, ajaxOptions, thrownError) {
// thrownError only passed if an error was caught
// this == dom element listening
var message = thrownError === undefined? XMLHttpRequest.responseText : thrownError.message;
$(this).after("<p style='color:red'>"+ message +"</p>");
}
In this case, XMLHttpRequest.responseText
will contain the body (if any) returned from the server on the failed request. And thrownError
will contain the actual exception, which I believe you are actually after. But, I'd recommend checking to see if an exception was indeed passed in before trying to print its message, which is what I've done in my example. If it has caught an exception, it'll use that message, but if not, it'll use the server response.
It is worth noting that with jQuery, all events are always bound to something. Usually a DOM Node, but possibly the window
or the document
. If you wanted to do the same thing, without binding to the specific element to act on (like the above example), you could bind the event to the window
and select the element(s) to work on in your callback like this:
$(window).bind('ajaxError', function (event, XMLHttpRequest, ajaxOptions, thrownError) {
// thrownError only passed if an error was caught
// this == dom element listening
var message = thrownError === undefined? XMLHttpRequest.responseText : thrownError.message;
$('#toperrorbox').after("<p style='color:red'>"+ message +"</p>");
}
This may afford you greater control over the events, as you do not have to remember which elements they were bound to, and if you didn't use anonymous functions, you could unbind
specific callbacks at will.
http://docs.jquery.com/Ajax/ajaxError#examples
$('#toperrorbox').ajaxError(function (event, request, settings) {
$(this).after("<p style='color:red'>"+ request.responseText +"</p>");
}
Attach a function to be executed whenever an AJAX request fails.
I don't know prototype, but I'm pretty sure it's something like this:
$.ajax({
error: function(xhr, textStatus, exception) {
if (exception.message != "Syntax error") {
var newItem = '<p style="color:red">' + exception.message + '</p>';
$('#toperrorbox').after(newItem);
}
}
});
Edit: or you can try with something more global:
$('#toperrorbox').ajaxError(function(event, XMLHttpRequest, ajaxOptions, thrownError) {
if (thrownError != "Syntax error") {
var newItem = '<p style="color:red">' + thrownError + '</p>';
$(this).after(newItem);
}
})