Basic example of using .ajax() with JSONP? Basic example of using .ajax() with JSONP? ajax ajax

Basic example of using .ajax() with JSONP?


JSONP is really a simply trick to overcome XMLHttpRequest same domain policy. (As you know one cannot send AJAX (XMLHttpRequest) request to a different domain.)

So - instead of using XMLHttpRequest we have to use script HTMLl tags, the ones you usually use to load JS files, in order for JS to get data from another domain. Sounds weird?

Thing is - turns out script tags can be used in a fashion similar to XMLHttpRequest! Check this out:

script = document.createElement("script");script.type = "text/javascript";script.src = "http://www.someWebApiServer.com/some-data";

You will end up with a script segment that looks like this after it loads the data:

<script>{['some string 1', 'some data', 'whatever data']}</script>

However this is a bit inconvenient, because we have to fetch this array from script tag. So JSONP creators decided that this will work better (and it is):

script = document.createElement("script");script.type = "text/javascript";script.src = "http://www.someWebApiServer.com/some-data?callback=my_callback";

Notice my_callback function over there? So - when JSONP server receives your request and finds callback parameter - instead of returning plain JS array it'll return this:

my_callback({['some string 1', 'some data', 'whatever data']});

See where the profit is: now we get automatic callback (my_callback) that'll be triggered once we get the data. That's all there is to know about JSONP: it's a callback and script tags.


NOTE:
These are simple examples of JSONP usage, these are not production ready scripts.

RAW JavaScript demonstration (simple Twitter feed using JSONP):

<html>    <head>    </head>    <body>        <div id = 'twitterFeed'></div>        <script>        function myCallback(dataWeGotViaJsonp){            var text = '';            var len = dataWeGotViaJsonp.length;            for(var i=0;i<len;i++){                twitterEntry = dataWeGotViaJsonp[i];                text += '<p><img src = "' + twitterEntry.user.profile_image_url_https +'"/>' + twitterEntry['text'] + '</p>'            }            document.getElementById('twitterFeed').innerHTML = text;        }        </script>        <script type="text/javascript" src="http://twitter.com/status/user_timeline/padraicb.json?count=10&callback=myCallback"></script>    </body></html>


Basic jQuery example (simple Twitter feed using JSONP):

<html>    <head>        <script type="text/javascript" src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.6.2/jquery.min.js"></script>        <script>            $(document).ready(function(){                $.ajax({                    url: 'http://twitter.com/status/user_timeline/padraicb.json?count=10',                    dataType: 'jsonp',                    success: function(dataWeGotViaJsonp){                        var text = '';                        var len = dataWeGotViaJsonp.length;                        for(var i=0;i<len;i++){                            twitterEntry = dataWeGotViaJsonp[i];                            text += '<p><img src = "' + twitterEntry.user.profile_image_url_https +'"/>' + twitterEntry['text'] + '</p>'                        }                        $('#twitterFeed').html(text);                    }                });            })        </script>    </head>    <body>        <div id = 'twitterFeed'></div>    </body></html>


JSONP stands for JSON with Padding. (very poorly named technique as it really has nothing to do with what most people would think of as “padding”.)


There is even easier way how to work with JSONP using jQuery

$.getJSON("http://example.com/something.json?callback=?", function(result){   //response data are now in the result variable   alert(result);});

The ? on the end of the URL tells jQuery that it is a JSONP request instead of JSON. jQuery registers and calls the callback function automatically.

For more detail refer to the jQuery.getJSON documentation.


In response to the OP, there are two problems with your code: you need to set jsonp='callback', and adding in a callback function in a variable like you did does not seem to work.

Update: when I wrote this the Twitter API was just open, but they changed it and it now requires authentication. I changed the second example to a working (2014Q1) example, but now using github.

This does not work any more - as an exercise, see if you can replace it with the Github API:

$('document').ready(function() {    var pm_url = 'http://twitter.com/status';    pm_url += '/user_timeline/stephenfry.json';    pm_url += '?count=10&callback=photos';    $.ajax({        url: pm_url,        dataType: 'jsonp',        jsonpCallback: 'photos',        jsonp: 'callback',    });});function photos (data) {    alert(data);    console.log(data);};

although alert()ing an array like that does not really work well... The "Net" tab in Firebug will show you the JSON properly. Another handy trick is doing

alert(JSON.stringify(data));

You can also use the jQuery.getJSON method. Here's a complete html example that gets a list of "gists" from github. This way it creates a randomly named callback function for you, that's the final "callback=?" in the url.

<!DOCTYPE html><html lang="en">    <head>        <title>JQuery (cross-domain) JSONP Twitter example</title>        <script type="text/javascript"src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7/jquery.min.js"></script>        <script>            $(document).ready(function(){                $.getJSON('https://api.github.com/gists?callback=?', function(response){                    $.each(response.data, function(i, gist){                        $('#gists').append('<li>' + gist.user.login + " (<a href='" + gist.html_url + "'>" +                             (gist.description == "" ? "undescribed" : gist.description) + '</a>)</li>');                    });                });            });        </script>    </head>    <body>        <ul id="gists"></ul>    </body></html>