In jQuery's aJax method, the object passed in includes success and error handling. Why then would you still need to use methods like #then or #done or #fail if it can already be taken care of inside the ajax request parameter?
1 Answer
success
and error
can't be used to pass promises within a promise chain that are returned by $.ajax
You can't return
anything to those methods the way you can within then()
.
Consider a series of ajax requests that must all complete before some other code can execute.
$.getJSON(url)
.then(function(resp1) {
// this request won't run until previous one completed
return $.getJSON(resp1.urlValue).done(function(resp2) {
// can do things in individual request done also
});
}).then(function(resp2) {
return $.getJSON(resp2.urlValue, function(resp3){
// or do something in success callback for this request
});
}).then(function() {
// do something here now that all the requests have resolved
}).fail(function() {
alert('I fire if any of the above fail');
});
This chain won't work using success callbacks