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167 lines
6.6 KiB
167 lines
6.6 KiB
AJAX with jQuery |
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================ |
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`jQuery`_ is a small JavaScript library commonly used to simplify working |
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with the DOM and JavaScript in general. It is the perfect tool to make |
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web applications more dynamic by exchanging JSON between server and |
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client. |
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JSON itself is a very lightweight transport format, very similar to how |
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Python primitives (numbers, strings, dicts and lists) look like which is |
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widely supported and very easy to parse. It became popular a few years |
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ago and quickly replaced XML as transport format in web applications. |
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If you have Python 2.6 JSON will work out of the box, in Python 2.5 you |
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will have to install the `simplejson`_ library from PyPI. |
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.. _jQuery: http://jquery.com/ |
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.. _simplejson: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/simplejson |
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Loading jQuery |
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-------------- |
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In order to use jQuery, you have to download it first and place it in the |
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static folder of your application and then ensure it's loaded. Ideally |
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you have a layout template that is used for all pages where you just have |
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to add a script statement to your `head` to load jQuery: |
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.. sourcecode:: html |
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<script type=text/javascript src="{{ |
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url_for('static', filename='jquery.js') }}"></script> |
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Another method is using Google's `AJAX Libraries API |
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<http://code.google.com/apis/ajaxlibs/documentation/>`_ to load jQuery: |
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.. sourcecode:: html |
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<script type=text/javascript |
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src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script> |
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In this case you don't have to put jQuery into your static folder, it will |
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instead be loaded from Google directly. This has the advantage that your |
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website will probably load faster for users if they were to at least one |
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other website before using the same jQuery version from Google because it |
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will already be in the browser cache. Downside is that if you don't have |
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network connectivity during development jQuery will not load. |
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Where is My Site? |
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----------------- |
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Do you know where your application is? If you are developing the answer |
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is quite simple: it's on localhost port something and directly on the root |
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of that server. But what if you later decide to move your application to |
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a different location? For example to ``http://example.com/myapp``? On |
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the server side this never was a problem because we were using the handy |
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:func:`~flask.url_for` function that did could answer that question for |
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us, but if we are using jQuery we should better not hardcode the path to |
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the application but make that dynamic, so how can we do that? |
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A simple method would be to add a script tag to our page that sets a |
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global variable to the prefix to the root of the application. Something |
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like this: |
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.. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
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<script type=text/javascript> |
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$SCRIPT_ROOT = {{ request.script_root|tojson|safe }}; |
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</script> |
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The ``|safe`` is necessary so that Jinja does not escape the JSON encoded |
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string with HTML rules. Usually this would be necessary, but we are |
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inside a `script` block here where different rules apply. |
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.. admonition:: Information for Pros |
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In HTML the `script` tag is declared `CDATA` which means that entities |
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will not be parsed. Everything until ``</script>`` is handled as script. |
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This also means that there must never be any ``</`` between the script |
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tags. ``|tojson`` is kindly enough to do the right thing here and |
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escape slashes for you (``{{ "</script>"|tojson|safe }}`` is rendered as |
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``"<\/script>"``). |
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JSON View Functions |
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------------------- |
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Now let's create a server side function that accepts two URL arguments of |
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numbers which should be added together and then sent back to the |
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application in a JSON object. This is a really ridiculous example and is |
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something you usually would do on the client side alone, but a simple |
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example that shows how you would use jQuery and Flask nonetheless:: |
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from flask import Flask, jsonify, render_template, request |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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@app.route('/_add_numbers') |
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def add_numbers(): |
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a = request.args.get('a', 0, type=int) |
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b = request.args.get('b', 0, type=int) |
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return jsonify(result=a + b) |
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@app.route('/') |
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def index(): |
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return render_template('index.html') |
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As you can see I also added an `index` method here that renders a |
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template. This template will load jQuery as above and have a little form |
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we can add two numbers and a link to trigger the function on the server |
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side. |
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Note that we are using the :meth:`~werkzeug.MultiDict.get` method here |
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which will never fail. If the key is missing a default value (here ``0``) |
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is returned. Furthermore it can convert values to a specific type (like |
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in our case `int`). This is especially handy for code that is |
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triggered by a script (APIs, JavaScript etc.) because you don't need |
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special error reporting in that case. |
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The HTML |
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-------- |
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You index.html template either has to extend a `layout.html` template with |
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jQuery loaded and the `$SCRIPT_ROOT` variable set, or do that on the top. |
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Here the HTML code needed for our little application (`index.html`). |
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Notice that we also drop the script directly into the HTML here. It is |
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usually a better idea to have that in a separate script file: |
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.. sourcecode:: html |
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<script type=text/javascript> |
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$(function() { |
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$('a#calculate').bind('click', function() { |
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$.getJSON($SCRIPT_ROOT + '/_add_numbers', { |
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a: $('input[name="a"]').val(), |
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b: $('input[name="b"]').val() |
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}, function(data) { |
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$("#result").text(data.result); |
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}); |
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return false; |
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}); |
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}); |
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</script> |
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<h1>jQuery Example</h1> |
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<p><input type=text size=5 name=a> + |
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<input type=text size=5 name=b> = |
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<span id=result>?</span> |
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<p><a href=# id=calculate>calculate server side</a> |
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I won't got into detail here about how jQuery works, just a very quick |
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explanation of the little bit of code above: |
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1. ``$(function() { ... })`` specifies code that should run once the |
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browser is done loading the basic parts of the page. |
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2. ``#('selector')`` selects an element and lets you operate on it. |
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3. ``element.bind('event', func)`` specifies a function that should run |
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when the user clicked on the element. If that function returns |
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`false`, the default behaviour will not kick in (in this case, navigate |
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to the `#` URL). |
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4. ``$.getJSON(url, data, func)`` sends a `GET` request to `url` and will |
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send the contents of the `data` object as query parameters. Once the |
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data arrived, it will call the given function with the return value as |
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argument. Note that we can use the `$SCRIPT_ROOT` variable here that |
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we set earlier. |
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If you don't get the whole picture, download the `sourcecode |
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for this example |
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<http://github.com/mitsuhiko/flask/tree/master/examples/jqueryexample>`_ |
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from github.
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