Ajax module in Vanilla JS
You can use this module with AMD, CommonJS or just like a method of window
object!
You can install via bower (but you should avoid that):
bower install ajax
Just download dist/ajax.min.js
file, and add dist/ajax.min.js
on your HTML file:
<script src="js/ajax.min.js"></script>
npm i --save @fdaciuk/ajax
You may use a CDN to get the latest version.
CDNJS:
https://cdnjs.com/libraries/fdaciuk-ajax
GitHub:
Or you may just add the following line to your HTML file:
<script src="//cdn.rawgit.com/fdaciuk/ajax/v3.0.4/dist/ajax.min.js"></script>
define(['ajax'], function (ajax) {
ajax().get(...)
...
})
var ajax = require('@fdaciuk/ajax')
ajax().post(...)
...
import ajax from '@fdaciuk/ajax'
ajax().put(...)
window.ajax().get(...)
or just
ajax().get(...)
ajax([options])
Optional object with request options. See all accepted options below.
HTTP Methods
You may pass any HTTP method as you want, using method
property:
var request = ajax({
method: 'options',
url: '/api/users',
data: {
user: 'john'
}
})
request.then(function (response) {...})
For using this kind of request, you must pass url
property.
The property data
is optional, but may used to pass any data via body
on request.
headers
An object when key
is a header name, and value
is a header value.
ajax({
headers: {
'content-type': 'application/json',
'x-access-token': '123@abc'
}
})
If content-type
is not passed, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
will be used when you pass data
as a query string.
Passing data
as object
, application/json
will be automatically used (since v3.0.0).
Note about uploads:
If you need to upload some file, with FormData
, use content-type: null
.
baseUrl
You can pass a baseUrl
param to improve calls. Example:
const request = ajax({ baseUrl: 'http://example.com/api/v2' })
request.get('/users') // get `http://example.com/api/v2/users` url
You may use any of this methods, instead the above approach:
Get data as a JSON object.
ajax().get('/api/users')
You can pass data
on get
method, that will be added on URL as query string:
ajax().get('/api/users', { id: 1 })
It will request on /api/users?id=1
.
Save a new register or update part of this one.
// Without headers
ajax().post('/api/users', { slug: 'john' })
// With headers
var request = ajax({
headers: {
'x-access-token': '123@abc'
}
})
request.post('/login', { username: 'user', password: 'b4d45$' })
data
might be a complex object, like:
ajax().post('/api/new-post', {
slug: 'my-new-post',
meta: {
categories: ['js', 'react'],
tags: ['code']
}
})
Update an entire register.
ajax().put('/api/users', { slug: 'john', age: 37 })
Delete a register.
ajax().delete('/api/users', { id: 1 })
Disclaimer: these return methods are not from real Promises, and they will just being called once. If you want to work with real Promises, you should make your own abstraction.
Promise that returns if the request was successful.
ajax().get('/api/users').then(function (response, xhr) {
// Do something
})
Promise that returns if the request has an error.
ajax().post('/api/users', { slug: 'john' }).catch(function (response, xhr) {
// Do something
})
That promise always returns, independent if the status is
done
orerror
.
ajax().post('/api/users', { slug: 'john' }).always(function (response, xhr) {
// Do something
})
If a request is very slow, you can abort it using abort()
method:
const getLazyUser = ajax().get('/api/users/lazy')
const timer = setTimeout(function () {
getLazyUser.abort()
}, 3000)
getLazyUser.then(function (response) {
clearTimeout(timer)
console.log(response)
})
In the above example, if request is slowest than 3 seconds, it will be aborted.
You may see the deprecated methods here
Check CONTRIBUTING.md
https://github.com/reportz/ajax
Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | 9+ ✔ | Latest ✔ | Latest ✔ | 3.2+ ✔ |
MIT © Fernando Daciuk