1

is there a way to send websocket message with parameter ? I would like to send a message to the website, and from the website be able to redirect it to correct div.

The concept is to send message + id, and depending on the id redirect it where it belongs. The id can be number or letter.

So far this is my partial server code (simplified):

  def on_message(self, message):
    global c
    if message == "w": 
    c = "8";
    if message == "s":
    c = "2"
    if c == '8' :
    self.write_message("This should appear in first div ")
    elif c == '2' :
    self.write_message("This should appear in second div ")

And client code:

<div id="output">First div</div>
<div id="output2">Second div</div>

 socket.onmessage = function(msg)
{
    showServerResponse(msg.data);
}
function showServerResponse(txt)
{
    var p = document.createElement('p');
    p.innerHTML = txt;
    document.getElementById('output').appendChild(p); 
}   

This is binded to send any message to div "output".

Should I override write_message function ? How should it look like ?

Thanks for any advice.

2 Answers 2

2

If you want to send parameters, simply send your message as a JSON string. This is the way to do it through websockets.

In your javascript you can send something like

socket.send(JSON.stringify({messageid : "your id", message : "your text message"});

And receive a JSON string like that

socket.onmessage = function(data){
     var message = JSON.parse(data.data);
     // now you have your JSON object in the var message

     console.log(message); // outputs the object in the browser's console
}

Actually, I think a good practice is to communicate using only JSON (or XML) when using a websocket. This way your application will be more coherent.

Using JSON allows you to send structured messages to your client also. There is for sure a JSON lib for your server-side language.

Sorry I can't help more with the server side script since I don't know tornado and almost no python but tornado write a Jsonp object should help.

3
  • Good idea, I am looking at it right now. So .. I should be able to access the parameters on server side using JSON.parse, right ? Can I send JSON data to server the same way ?
    – Zoidbergus
    Feb 27, 2014 at 15:47
  • On the server you will have to parse the JSON using the function provided by your python JSON library which will be something like from tornado.escape import json_decode and then you can use json_decode(data_received). Do some research to find out the exact way to do it I'm just guessing right now.
    – Johnride
    Feb 27, 2014 at 16:00
  • Solved, thanks for guidance, I will write my solution as an answer.
    – Zoidbergus
    Mar 1, 2014 at 15:20
0

So, I will repair it to JSON but now I'm sending letters from website:

socket.send("w")
socket.send("s")

and on server side are waiting JSON objects:

forward = { "messageid": 1,
         "message": "First message"
       }
backward = { "messageid": 2,
         "message": "Second message"
       }

And depending on case I send back to client JSON:

def on_message(self, message):
  global c
  if message == "w": 
  c = "8";
  if message == "s":
  c = "2"
  if c == '8' :
  self.write_message(json_encode(forward))
  elif c == '2' :
  self.write_message(json_encode(backward))

Back in browser is function waiting for json object:

<div id="output">First div</div>
<div id="output2">Second div</div>

socket.onmessage = function(msg){
 var message = JSON.parse(msg.data);
 if(message.messageid== 1)
  {
   showServerResponse(message.message)
  }
 if(message.messageid== 2)
  {
   showServerResponse2(message.message)
  }
}

And the function to show to div:

function showServerResponse(txt)
{
 var p = document.createElement('p');
 p.innerHTML = txt;
 document.getElementById('output').appendChild(p); 
}   

Second function is showServerResponse2(txt) sending it to 'output2'.

This way you can send messages from server to client to different divs, depending on sent parameter, which was the original question. The thing is it is recommended to send every message with correct parameter, or it may be lost.

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.