1

I can't seem to get the following code to output anything to the screen. JavaScript is not my strong suit!

This is the JavaScript code calling a local file that outputs a list of rooms

$.getJSON('roomupdate.php?level=1&div=1&callback=json',function(res){
console.log(res.rooms.name[0]);
});

In the above I'm merely trying to see the name of the first room in the console. And this is the JSON output (Which I can confirm the script can see and load)

json(
{
        "rooms":
        [
            { "name" : "Bedroom" },
            { "name" : "Living Room" },
            { "name" : "Lounge" },
            { "name" : "Kitchen" }
        ]
})

Could anyone suggest what I am doing wrong? Even to view in the console?

Lastly, can you loop through the array?

1
  • 2
    You might wanna access your object like rooms[0].name.
    – Amberlamps
    Jul 12, 2013 at 10:27

3 Answers 3

2

Your JSON data contains an object rooms and this object actually contains an array [], So to access the data inside your array you need to put the index on rooms :

console.log(res.rooms[0].name);
1
  • Thanks. I know this should work but it isn't. I think its my JSON format. It can't be anything else!
    – Colin
    Jul 12, 2013 at 10:49
1

Use callback=? rather than callback=json so that jQuery knows you are using JSONp and can choose it's own name for the callback function.

$.getJSON('roomupdate.php?level=1&div=1&callback=?',function(res){
    //alert('Your name is '+res.rooms);

    console.log(res.rooms.name[0]);
});

See http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.getJSON/#jsonp for details.

Edit:

Looking again, you will need to change the way you are accessing the data around. res.rooms.name[0] should be res.rooms[0].name because rooms is a list, and each room has a name property.

1
  • Thank you for the info on the callback. I didn't realise it should be ?
    – Colin
    Jul 12, 2013 at 10:50
0

This will loop through the array of rooms and log the name of each one:

$.each( res.rooms, function( i, room ) {
    console.log( room.name );
});

If that doesn't work, then add this statement at the beginning of your callback (where you have the console.log() call now):

debugger;

Load/run your page with the developer tools open, and it will stop in the debugger where you have that statement. Now you can look at all your variables in detail, try out expressions to see what they do, single step through your code, etc.

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.