So here is the deal. You are going to kick off the animation at the same time as you kick off the ajax, and not fire the callback until the animation is complete. So...
|--------------------------------|
animation starts animation completes
|---------------|----------------|
ajax starts ajax completes callback fires
or
|--------------------------------|
animation starts animation completes
|------------------------------------------|
ajax starts ajax completes / callback fires
so if the ajax comes back before the animation is done, it waits for the animation, and if the ajax comes after the animation, it will fire right away. This is the best of both worlds to a degree, because animation is always respected, and the user will not have to wait for lazy ajax request (one occurring after the animation).
function ajax(url) {
// init cb to null
var cb = null;
// start the 1.5 second long animation
animationStart();
// set timeout for 1.5 seconds
setTimeout(function(){
// cb will be set to a function if the ajax has completed already
if(cb){
// ajax has already completed
cb(); // run the function set by ajax success
}else{
// ajax has not yet completed
cb = true; // set value to true
}
}, 1500);
// start the ajax request
$.ajax({
url: API.hostname + url,
dataType: "json",
complete: function() {
$html.css("cursor", "default");
},
success: function (response) {
// the cb will be set by the timeout if the animation is complete already
if(cb){
// animation was already complete, fire the callback right away
callback(response);
}else{
// animation is not yet complete, set cb to a function, so the callback can
// run it when the animation is complete
cb = function(){ callback(response); };
}
}
});
}