Nothing is wrong, as soon as i change the lib to 1.3.2 my on success stuff works just fine? How comes? Not even the alert with TEST appears..

Here's the code this is happening on:

function crop() {
    $.ajax({
        type: "POST",
        dataType: 'json',
        url:"functions.php?action=crop",
        data: 
        {
            x: $('#x').val(),y: $('#y').val(),w: $('#w').val(),
            h: $('#h').val(),fname:$('#fname').val(),fixed:fixed,
            sizew:sizew,sizeh:sizeh},
            success: function(response)
            {
                alert('TEST');
                if(!fixed) // Missing { }
                { 
                    $("#showPhoto").css({overflow:"auto"}); // Missing ;
                }
                $("#showPhoto").html(
                    $(document.createElement("img")).attr(
                        "src",response.filename)).show();

                $("#showPhoto").after("There you go...").show();
                $("#image").slideUp();
           },
          error:function(response) {
                   console.log('error: ', response);
               }
        });
    }

How can i make it to work with jquery 1.4.2 library?

link|improve this question

77% accept rate
4  
What's fixed? – SLaks Sep 3 '10 at 22:35
How is this different from your previous question? stackoverflow.com/questions/3639317/… – user113716 Sep 3 '10 at 22:38
fixed is a var fixed = 1; if the image have fixed size.. – Karem Sep 3 '10 at 22:42
@patrick dw, i know the main problem now, and want it to work with 1.4.2. In the other question i wanted to know what the problem is, but now i know and want to solve it – Karem Sep 3 '10 at 22:43
@Karem: If you know the problem, then what is it? – Guffa Sep 3 '10 at 22:47
show 4 more comments
feedback

1 Answer

up vote 1 down vote accepted

The JSON coming back isn't valid, the example you posted:

({"filename":"images\/profilePhoto\/thumbs\/1283596240.jpg"}) 

And the response I got in the page:

({"filename":"1283597560.jpg"})

Both aren't valid JSON, you need to remove the () wrapper on there. You can check your JSON response for validity here: http://www.jsonlint.com/

The 1.3.2 vs 1.4.2 difference is that in 1.4.0 jQuery added strict JSON checking, if it's not valid it'll fail (so it can take better advantage of browsers' native JSON parsers).

From the 1.4 release notes:

Strict JSON parsing, using native JSON.parse: (jQuery.ajax() Documentation, Commit 1, Commit 2, Commit 3)

jQuery 1.3 and earlier used JavaScript’s eval to evaluate incoming JSON. jQuery 1.4 uses the native JSON parser if available. It also validates incoming JSON for validity, so malformed JSON (for instance {foo: "bar"}) will be rejected by jQuery in jQuery.getJSON and when specifying “json” as the dataType of an Ajax request.

link|improve this answer
Thank you!!.... – Karem Sep 4 '10 at 10:59
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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