1

I have a very complex form which contains multiple tabs. Each tab contains a unique Plupload instance (for uploading multiple images). The form allows a user to upload a medical image 'case' where each case is made up of multiple imaging 'studies' (e.g. CT scans) and each study contains multiple images.

When the user clicks the 'submit' button, I intercept the click with jQuery because I need to do the following:

  1. Check the required fields are entered [easy]
  2. Get a unique id number from my server. This id number is required by each Plupload instance to know which directory to upload to.

In my function called upon form submission I have the following code snippet:

var case_id;

// Code to check the required fields are entered
....

// Get the case id number from the server
$.get('ajax/unique-case-id').done(function(data){
    case_id = data;
});

// do something with case_id and other things. MUST happen after the ajax call
....

// if there was a problem uploading the images, stop the form from submitting
if (problem_occured) {
    return false;
}

With my current logic, I need the script to pause UNTIL it gets case_id. This was possible before jQuery 1.8 but the $.ajax() async : false property has been deprecated.

My question is two-fold:

  1. Is there a way to hold up the script until I get the required case_id?
  2. If not, any idea how I could change my logic to work around this?

You might be wondering why case_id is so important. The plupload instances do their upload before the form submits and they need a directory to upload to. I want the images being uploaded to go into a folder on my server called case_id. This will let the PHP script on the server figure out what to do with them once it gets the rest of the form POSTed data.

1
  • You need to make everything asynchronous, then re-submit the form.
    – SLaks
    May 12, 2013 at 20:24

1 Answer 1

2

This is a very common 'problem' that can be solved pretty easily by using callbacks appropriately.

$("#submitButton").click(function (event) {
    event.preventDefault(); //Don't submit the form, we'll submit it manually.

    var case_id;

    // Code to check the required fields are entered
    ....

    // Get the case id number from the server
    $.get('ajax/unique-case-id').done(function(data){
        case_id = data;

        // do something with case_id and other things. MUST happen after the ajax call
        ....

        // if there was a problem uploading the images, stop the form from submitting
        if (problem_occured) {
            alert("something went wrong");
        } else {
            $("#referenceToTheForm").submit();
        }

    });
});

Long story short, keeping the "deal with problems or submit the form" inside of the callback to the $.get call will essentially cause the script to 'pause' until it gets the data back. Then you can use something like spin.js to give the user a good waiting experience until it's done.

3
  • Not that it matters, but you might want to put the event.preventDefault(); as the first line of the handler. That way, if any errors are thrown in the main code, it won't be skipped
    – Ian
    May 12, 2013 at 20:35
  • Thank you so much Stephen. Works perfectly. If only I could have figured that out myself 5 hours ago! May 12, 2013 at 20:53
  • No problem.. it gets more fun when you're trying to wait for multiple service responses :)
    – Stephen
    May 12, 2013 at 20:55

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.