1

I have a simple jquery function that sends a post request to a PHP file like this:

$.post('/file.php',
{
     action: 'send'   
},

function(data, textStatus)
{     
     alert(data);
});

And a PHP file:

<?php

/* Some SQL queries here */

echo 'action done';

/* echo response back to jquery and continue other actions here */

?>

jQuery by default waits till executing the whole PHP script before giving the alert. Is there a way to alert the action done before executing the rest of the PHP file??

Thanks

4
  • 1
    The "action done" message is sent by PHP. There is not way to get the response before the script terminates.
    – Salman A
    Jul 1, 2013 at 12:31
  • 1
    @SalmanA that's only true if output buffering is on, otherwise action done will be sent to the browser before the execution completes.
    – MrCode
    Jul 1, 2013 at 12:33
  • Yes, the "action done" message could be sent to the browser before the script terminates but the success/complete events of AJAX handler will not be fires until the connection is closed.
    – Salman A
    Jul 1, 2013 at 12:35
  • 3
    Perhaps this question can help you.
    – Sumurai8
    Jul 1, 2013 at 12:37

1 Answer 1

1

It is possible with plain Javascript ajax. The onreadystatechange event will fire with a readyState of 3, when data is received before the request is complete.

In the example below, newData will contain the new piece of data. We have to do some processing because the XHR actually gives us the entire data so far in responseText and so if we only want to know the new data, we have to keep a record of the last index.

var httpRequest, lastIndex = 0;

if (window.XMLHttpRequest) { // Mozilla, Safari, ...
    httpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest();
} else if (window.ActiveXObject) { // IE 8 and older
    httpRequest = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP");
}

httpRequest.onreadystatechange = function() {
    if(httpRequest.readyState === 3) {
        var newData = httpRequest.responseText.substring(lastIndex);
        lastIndex = httpRequest.responseText.length;

        console.log(newData);
    } 
};

httpRequest.open('POST', '/file.php');
httpRequest.send('action=send');

As for jQuery ajax, this answer suggests jQuery lets you bind to the readystatechange but I haven't tested it.

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