You may do this in Vanilla JS :
var httpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest();
httpRequest.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (httpRequest.readyState === 4) {
console.log(httpRequest.responseText);
}
};
pmc.loading.start();
httpRequest.open('GET', url);
httpRequest.send();
Ajax's error callback can be used too :
$.ajax({
url: url,
error: function(httpRequest){
console.log(httpRequest.responseText);
}
});
This being said, I wonder, from your comments, if you're not subject to problems related to same origin policy : you can't read in javascript the content of a page issued from another domain if the site's owner didn't put the right headers.
If that's the case, you can't do anything purely client-side without the consent of the site owner. The easiest would be to add a proxy on your site to serve the page as if it was coming from your site.
jqXHR
object returned by the call to the ajax method should have the full response in it. This should be passed in as the first parameter to theerror
method defined on the request. api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax/#jqXHR