I have a big problem. I know it's about callback, closure but I don't know how to solve the problem. Here is my code

$.Model.extend('Article',
{
     findAll : function(params, success, error){                
                var result = []
                db.transaction(function(tx) {
                    tx.executeSql('select * from contents', [],function(tx, rs) {
                        for(var i=0; i<rs.rows.length; i++) {
                            var row = rs.rows.item(i)
                            result[i] = {
                                id: row['id'],
                                title: row['title'],
                                body: row['body']
                            }
                        }
                    })
                })
                //here result is undefined
                alert(result)
                return result
    }
})
//undefined
var view = Article.findAll

I know that executeSql is asynchronous function, but I don't know how to save and return result of executeSql. I use javascript mvc and HTML offline database.

Thank you for your help

link|improve this question
I Google'd "Javascript MVC" and found the library, but can't find anything in the JavaScript MVC docs about 'executeSql'. If you have docs handy, you should check to see if there is a way to make the tx.executeSql method run synchronously instead of asynchronous. – Charlie Brown Dec 13 '09 at 23:42
I know there is also synchronous method for executeSql, but safari and other webkit based browsers support only asynchronous. Code below works perfectly, thank you guys – Tibor Dec 14 '09 at 9:51
1  
Works perfectly? One might almost say, it was the "answer" ? ;) – Charlie Brown Dec 16 '09 at 20:22
The synchronous API only applies (in the spec) to web workers, not the window object, so that's not a possibility. dev.w3.org/html5/webdatabase/#databases – Grumdrig Jul 20 '10 at 4:55
feedback

4 Answers

The W3C web database spec talks about support for both Asynchronous and Synchronous database operations. (See 4.3 and 4.4)

If you can't use a synchronous implementation, then you might want to consider approaching the problem like this instead:

$.Model.extend('Article',
{
     findAll : function(params, success, error){                
                var result = []
                db.transaction(function(tx) {
                    tx.executeSql('select * from contents', [],function(tx, rs) {
                        for(var i=0; i<rs.rows.length; i++) {
                            var row = rs.rows.item(i)
                            result[i] = {
                                id: row['id'],
                                title: row['title'],
                                body: row['body']
                            }
                        }

                        success(result); //toss the result into the 'success' callback
                    })
                })
                //here result is undefined
                alert(result)
                return result
    }
})

Article.findAll([], function(view) {
        //...
    }, function() {
        //error occured
    });
link|improve this answer
feedback

I have the same issues, but you might want to use this little wrapper library that makes life easier ;)

http://github.com/grosser/arjs

link|improve this answer
feedback

I had the same problem, especially on mobile development projects. I created a library that eliminates the need for callbacks: http://code.google.com/p/proto-q/

This made my code easier to troubleshoot, maintain, and enhance.

I added support for AJAX, web workers, script injection, and the storage APIs. I hope it helps.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your trying to use the result synchronously, that is your accessing result before its defined (actually in your code example its not undefined, its an empty array) though I expect thats because you had moved the declaration from its original position trying to figure out what was happening.

Try this modified example:-

$.Model.extend('Article',
{
    findAll : function(params, success, error){                
            db.transaction(function(tx) {
                tx.executeSql('select * from contents', [], function(tx, rs) {
                    var result = [];
                    for(var i=0; i<rs.rows.length; i++) {
                        var row = rs.rows.item(i)
                        result.push({
                            id: row['id'],
                            title: row['title'],
                            body: row['body']
                        });
                    }
                    success(result);
                });
            });
    }
});

Article.findAll({}, function(result) { 
    // process result here
});

Article.findAll() is now an asynchronous function, and its callback (closure) receives the results.

link|improve this answer
Oh I should have read the other example first, as it is essentially the same! – Austin France Mar 2 at 14:45
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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