2

I am trying to make these two libraries work together. But I am not sure they can connect out of the box. Before using JSON-RPC plugin I did it successfully with standard $.ajax functionality. Could you please give me some short example of how a client-side function should look and the entry point for this on GAE side.

Or maybe there should be a special ProtoRPC jQuery library created to make this work easily?

JSON-RPC plugin homepage

3 Answers 3

4

ProtoRPC doesn't use the JSON-RPC message format. It uses a simpler format where each API method provides its own endpoint, rather than one endpoint that takes a method name as part of the request dictionary.

Here's the example they provide for $.ajax:

$.ajax({url: '/hello.hello',
          type: 'POST',
          contentType: 'application/json',
          data: '{ my_name: Bob }',
          dataType: 'json',
          success: function(response) {
            // The response is { hello: "Hello there, Bob!" }
            alert(response.hello);
          }
         });

Do you really need a special jQuery library for this? I'm not sure it can get much simpler.

1
  • Yeah, I have read more about this and it seems like there is no actually a library needed. It's already quite simple. Thanks. Apr 29, 2011 at 10:27
3

We definitely need to develop a general purpose protorpc library for users. After that, it would be best to write a jquery plugin that works with it.

I actually thought about getting a way for ProtoRPC to support JSON-RPC as a separate protocol, however there may be some things about JSON-RPC that make it incompatible with ProtoRPC. Two things:

  • JSON requests allow for a list of arbitrary types in its parameters. ProtoRPC takes a single well defined type.

  • JSON fields and lists may contain arbitrary types. ProtoRPC fields and lists can only contain a single type.

I wish I had a better answer for you.

0

I'm working on the same idea, and have posted a similar question here.

I found that ProtoRPC does give a JSON response if your request has ContentType application/json, and jqGrid will produce this if you include ajaxGridOptions: { contentType: 'application/json; charset=utf-8' }, in your grid options, but that still leaves the problem that ProtoRPC only accepts one well-defined parameter, while jqGrid by default tries to upload 5 or so url-formatted parameters, even when you set it to POST instead of GET.

I'm currently trying to use the grid.postext.js plugin to get round this, so far without success.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.