I'm not sure where I'm going wrong of what I'm missing.

I'm building an ASP.NET 2.0 (on the .Net 3.5 framework) Web application and I am including a webservice. Note that this is not an MVC project. I wish to expose a method which will return a JSON string; formatted to feed the jqGrid jQuery plugin.

This is the preliminary test method I've implemented in my service: thanks to (Phil Haack's Guide for MVC)

[WebMethod]
[ScriptMethod(ResponseFormat = ResponseFormat.Json)]
public string getData()
{
    JavaScriptSerializer ser = new JavaScriptSerializer();

    var jsonData = new
    {
        total = 1, // we'll implement later 
        page = 1,
        records = 3, // implement later 
        rows = new[]{
          new {id = 1, cell = new[] {"1", "-7", "Is this a good question?", "yay"}},
          new {id = 2, cell = new[] {"2", "15", "Is this a blatant ripoff?", "yay"}},
          new {id = 3, cell = new[] {"3", "23", "Why is the sky blue?", "yay"}}
        }
    };

    return ser.Serialize(jsonData); //products.ToString();
}

When invoked this is returning (formatted for clarity):

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?> 
<string  mlns="http://tempuri.org/">
{
  "total":1,
  "page":1,
  "records":3,
  "rows":
    [
      {"id":1,"cell":["1","-7","Is this a good question?","yay"]},
      {"id":2,"cell":["2","15","Is this a blatant ripoff?","yay"]},
      {"id":3,"cell":["3","23","Why is the sky blue?","yay"]}
    ]
}
</string> 

How would I achieve the above response without the xml wrappings?

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3 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

Three things you may not be doing:

  • Marking the method static
  • Performing a POST
  • Hand an empty "{ }" for the data in jQuery.

There may be a way to call the method with a GET, I've only ever used POST. I was able to get your example working with this:

<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.3.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script>
    // In your javascript block
    $(document).ready(function()
    {
        $.ajax({
            url: "/Default.aspx/Tester",
            type: "POST",
            contentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8",
            dataType: "json",
            data: "{}",
            success: done
        });
    });

    function done(data)
    {
        // Include http://www.json.org/json2.js if your browser doesn't support JSON natively
        var data = JSON.parse(data.d);
        alert(data.total);
    }
</script>

The code behind (you don't need to create a webservice, you can put this in your default.aspx):

[WebMethod]
public static string Tester()
{
    JavaScriptSerializer ser = new JavaScriptSerializer();

    var jsonData = new
    {
        total = 1, // we'll implement later 
        page = 1,
        records = 3, // implement later 
        rows = new[]{
              new {id = 1, cell = new[] {"1", "-7", "Is this a good question?", "yay"}},
              new {id = 2, cell = new[] {"2", "15", "Is this a blatant ripoff?", "yay"}},
              new {id = 3, cell = new[] {"3", "23", "Why is the sky blue?", "yay"}}
            }
        };

    return ser.Serialize(jsonData); //products.ToString();
}

The result:

{"d":"{\"total\":1,\"page\":1,\"records\":3,\"rows\":[{\"id\":1,\"cell\":[\"1\",\"-7\",\"Is this a good question?\",\"yay\"]},{\"id\":2,\"cell\":[\"2\",\"15\",\"Is this a blatant ripoff?\",\"yay\"]},{\"id\":3,\"cell\":[\"3\",\"23\",\"Why is the sky blue?\",\"yay\"]}]}"}

A more detailed explanation is here

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How did you get your result. When I implement as you have I seem to only get "[object Object]" back. This could be naivety to JSON, but I can't seem to get it to work. – Mike Jan 14 '10 at 9:35
I used firebug in Firefox to view the response from the Net panel - click the response tab for that request. – Chris S Jan 14 '10 at 9:59
Do you know why the data is being wrapped in the variable "d"? – Mike Jan 14 '10 at 10:07
1  
I've updated my answer. jQuery adds the 'd' to it. – Chris S Jan 14 '10 at 12:20
1  
The "d" isn't added by jQuery but .NET 3.5 as a security measure. – Chris S Jan 16 '10 at 13:46
show 2 more comments
feedback

In your code, don't "return" the json. Use instead:

Context.Response.Write(ser.Serialize(jsonData));

Then you'll be good.

The regular return command helps you by putting in a more proper service format. Some would say it'd be better form to use this, and unwrap your json on the client from this format. I say, just spit down the stuff exactly how you want to use it!

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This seems to work if you navigate to the .aspx page then follow the linkage through to invoke. Unfortunately if I try to navigate to "GridDataRequest.asmx/getData" I get a yellow screen of death "Request format is unrecognized for URL unexpectedly ending in '/getData'." – Mike Jan 14 '10 at 9:17
+1 for this handy gem of code. I've however chosen another solution to better-fit with our model. – Mike Jan 14 '10 at 14:28
Yep, better to use json.parse, as long as you're using jquery anyway. More proper. – Patrick Karcher Jan 14 '10 at 15:45
feedback

When you mark the service as a ScriptService, it automatically handles the JSON serialization. You shouldn't manually serialize the response. See this stack overflow entry for more detail.

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