Can you give a very simple example of reading a jsonp request with jquery? I just can't get it to work.
Here is working example:
<html><head><title>Twitter 2.0</title>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
</head><body>
<div id='tweet-list'></div>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
var url = "http://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/user_timeline/codinghorror.json";
$.getJSON(url + "?callback=?", null, function(tweets) {
for(i in tweets) {
tweet = tweets[i];
$("#tweet-list").append(tweet.text + "<hr />");
}
});
});
</script>
</body></html>
Notice the ?callback=? at the end of the requested URL. That indicates to the getJSON function that we want to use JSONP. Remove it and a vanilla JSON request will be used. Which will fail due to the same origin policy.
You can find more information and examples on the JQuery site: http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.getJSON/
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2I was trying out $.ajax with those jsonp parameters and could not get that to work. Anyway, this works nicely, thanks. – akula1001 Apr 23 '10 at 15:13
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2Does the
?callback=?actually get sent as part of the URL or is it just a kind of flag that jQuery sees and the strips off before fetching the URL? – hippietrail Nov 23 '11 at 18:31 -
1
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2I found this to be a good reference as a starting point. To answer above: Yes, the callback does get sent as a parameter and should be sent back as a function wrapped around the JSON response. See stackoverflow.com/questions/7936610/…. To send additional parameters they are sent in the second parameter of the getJSON(), in the above ex. replace null with {p:1,s:50} – Ecropolis Sep 19 '12 at 11:53
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I get error code 410 - gone. Is there an "eternally" present service returning JSON anywhere? Just so one can test that the own method works? – Konrad Viltersten Jun 19 '13 at 21:17