I have been playing with jstree (1.0rc2)+jquery (1.4.2) for the first time with c#.net and although I have gotten it working, there are a couple things that I don't understand about how data is provided to the tree by the webservice I use to populate the tree (using ajax and the json_data plug-in). I was hoping someone with more experience using jstree could provide some insight.

The jstree config looks like this:

 "json_data": {
                "ajax": {
                    "url": "GetTree.asmx/GetChildren",
                    "type": "POST",
                    "contentType": "application/json; charset=utf-8",
                    "dataType": "json",
                    "data": function(n) {
                        var result = "{'id':'" + (n.attr ? n.attr("id").replace("node_", "") : "0") + "'}";
                        return (result);
                    }
                }
            }

GetTree.asmx GetChildren method:

   [WebMethod]
    [ScriptMethod(ResponseFormat = ResponseFormat.Xml )]
    public string GetChildren(string id)
    {
        List<jsTreeNode> jsTree = new List<jsTreeNode>();
        //... (build the tree as needed)

        JavaScriptSerializer serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
        return(serializer.Serialize(jsTree)); 
    }

Question 1: So everything works great, so what's the problem? The problem is "ResponseFormat = ResponseFormat.Xml". I struggled for a while to get this working because it did not work when it was set to ResponseFormat.Json, which is what I would expect it to be. In that situation, no errors would be reported by the web service or by jQuery when parsing the json response, but the tree would render empty.

In looking at the HTML output of the web service, I could see no difference between what was rendered either way. I was hoping someone could explain why this works (counterintuitively) and why it does not work with ResponseFormat.Json, and if this is indicative of something else I might be doing wrong.

Question 2: Generally, web service or web handler?

Would using a generic web handler (ashx) be a more efficient way to do this anyway? Is there a substantial difference in the overhead required of a standard web service versus a generic web handler? Since my goal is basically to control exactly what is output (and using the json data format in the web service doesn't seem to be working the way I want it to anyway) I am not sure what benefit, if any, there is to using a web service here instead of just stripping it down completely. On the other hand this works now so maybe I should leave well enough alone.

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Seeing as this question has almost 600 views and no answers I thought I would answer it myself (since I've long since figured it out).

Using a ScriptMethod is really not the right way to communicate with jQuery ajax. While it can be done, you will notice what I was doing above is returning a string with data that I encoded myself to JSON using JavascriptSerializer.

However, using a ScriptMethod automatically incorporates serialization/deserialization designed to communicate with Microsoft's AJAX framework. Since serializing a pure string with no object wrapper will genererally result in the same string (whether I be returning XML or JSON format), it basically worked, but what was really happening internally is it was being serialized twice.

So what I should have done, at a minimum, was:

public List<jsTreeNode> GetChildren(string id)

that is, the return type should be the actual data type, not a string of serialized data.

However, this still wouldn't be exactly right, because Microsoft's methods wrap the return value in an object d. I could still extract that in Javascript to get the inner data. But if something like jsTree is expecting data in a predefined format this may not be workable.

The best solution is do not use WebServices, use generic handlers (ashx) instead. This gives you complete control over the format and handling of your input and output. It may take a little bit of doing to set yourself up a nice framework, but the frustration of being unable to skip parts of the WebService handling that you don't need makes it well worth it.

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Glad to see you figured this out... I had a similar problem and came to the conclusion a long time ago. Had I seen this, I would have helped. – jlrolin Apr 26 '11 at 15:51
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Sorry, I have to disagree with your answer the 3.5 framework has really good support for Json serialization and Web Services (and for 2.0 you can use Newtonsoft.Json). Please see my JsTree ASP.NET Web Control Demo at http://code.zyky.com/jsTreeView/Default.aspx and http://asp-net-elephant.blogspot.com/2012/01/how-to-use-jstree-in-aspnet-web-forms.html for an example of both. Hope this helps.

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Your example looks great! Where were you in October '10 when I was a babe in the woods?? :) With all the hindsight I have now, though, I definitely wouldn't advise someone start a new project using web services. There's just better stuff now, like WCF, or use System.Web.Routing and roll your own slick REST framework, e.g. blogs.msdn.com/b/henrikn/archive/2012/02/23/… – jamietre Mar 8 at 22:59
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