I'm trying to POST some JSON where I need to include some values from input fields. I have two input fields with the IDs of username and password.
data = JSON.stringify({
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"method": "POST",
"params": {
"params": {"username": $('#username').val(), "password": $('#password').val()}
}
});
I can send it perfectly fine when I hardcode the values, the issue is that it doesn't send the values from the input fields. What am I doing wrong?
I'm sending it like this:
$.ajax({
url:url,
type:"POST",
crossDomain: true,
dataType: "json",
data : data,
headers: {
'content-type': "application/json; charset=utf-8"
},
success: function(data){
$("#result").append('<p>Token: ' + data.result.token + '</p>');
$("#result").append('<p>Name: ' + data.result.Customer.Name.value + '</p>');
$("#result").append('<p>ID: ' + data.result.Customer.ID + '</p>');
},
error: function(data, status, xhr) {
alert("Error");
}
});
I tried simplifying things, so I'm adding the value to a div
on the click of a button. That works just fine:
$("#login").click(function() {
$('#test').append($('#username').val());
});
ANSWER: As David mentioned in the comments, it's because I declared the data variable outside the function.
"params": { "params": ... } }
doesn't seem logicalconsole.log(data)
look like? Do the fields exist? Is the declaration ofdata
being evaluated at a point when there is a value in the fields?stringify
will yield a string representation of whatever object you pass to it, regardless of how that object was constructed. If you can pass the exact same object. So if hard coded values work then there is something wrong with the way you access your values. What does aconsole.log(data)
look like? Do the fields exist? Is the declaration of data being evaluated at a point when there is a value in the fields? What does return the values to the screen mean?var data = JSON.stringify(x)
will create a string representation of the objectx
as it is at the time when that line of code is evaluated.data
will just be a string, nothing magical about it. If this is being done in page load, for instance, and your<input id="username" />
is empty at the time of page load, then the value of that property inx
will be an empty string, and the resultingdata
string will reflect that. If you enter a value in to the input field at a later point, that will not magically change the content of yourdata
string variable.