Reputation: 492
I think this is more down to timing than code, so really I am looking for best practice advice on how best to get a JSON response.
<script type="text/javascript">
$(window).load(function() {
$('#messages').append('<img src="images/loading.gif" alt="Currently Loading" id="loading" />');
var ideaid = <?php echo $_GET['ideaid']; ?>;
$.ajax({
url: 'sql/ajaxsql.php',
type: 'POST',
data: 'switch=commentList&ideaid=' + ideaid + '&filter=sortdate',
dataType: 'json',
success: function(result) {
var len = result.length;
var html;
console.log('length= ' + len);
$('#response').remove();
console.log(result);
for(var i = 0; i < len; i++) {
var pic = '<img src="https://graph.facebook.com/' + result[i].user_id + '/picture&type=small" align="middle" />';
var authname;
FB.api('/' + result[i].user_id + '?fields=name', function(AuthName) {
console.log(AuthName);
alert(AuthName.name);
authname = AuthName.name;
});
html = '<p>' + result[i].comment + '<br><hr>Date Added: ' + result[i].date + ' by ' + pic + ' ' + authname + '<br><hr><hr></p>';
$('#comms').append(html);
}
$('#loading').fadeOut(500, function() {
$(this).remove();
});
}
});
return false;
});
</script>
With this code, it fires off to get comments regarding a certain idea (idea_id). The comments only holds the Users ID (facebook). When all the data is back, the success then sorts the data ready to print to the screen in some order.
As part of the success, I have the date, time, FB image and name as part of the Author Info under each comment.
Date and Time, works. Image using the graph works, but the name is a bit late of the window loading, and so misses it's call, so comes back as undefined and then the Alert pops up with the name. I understand ajax is meant to do this.
Whats the best way to get round this.
Thank you in advance.
Andrew
EDIT
I have been unable to make this work, even with the suggestions below.
EDIT AGAIN Just seen bf new updated version as below. would also have worked. But I have spent a day on this one function and dare not to play.
As soon as the FB.api comes into play, I could not get the values from out side it. So I took a different approach.
Rather than ajax, I used the query from the PHP side that gets the data, including the uid and then json queried that, and bolted it onto the (mysql_fetch_array) array as follows:
$gc_result = mysql_query($gc_query);
while ($result = mysql_fetch_array($gc_result)) {
$jsonURL = "https://graph.facebook.com/" . $result['user_id'] . "/";
$json = json_decode(file_get_contents($jsonURL), true);
$result["name"] = $json['name'];
$data[] = $result;
}
echo json_encode($data);
Now I have that, I can then do the following and call it within the jQuery:
for(var i = 0; i < len; i++) {
var pic = '<img src="https://graph.facebook.com/' + result[i].user_id + '/picture?type=small" align="middle" />';
html = '<p>' + result[i].comment + '<br><hr>Date Added: ' + result[i].date + ' by ' + pic + ' ' + **result[i]['name']** + '<br><hr><hr></p>';
$('#comms').append(html);
}
This all works great, and I am a complete novice to programming jquery and using Facebook API and JSON, but even I sit back and am pretty impressed with this solution. Before I get carried away, are there any potential flaws in this, performance or security wise ???
Thanks again in Advance.
Andrew
Upvotes: 0
Views: 673
Reputation: 71939
The call to FB.api
is probably asynchronous (another ajax request), so you have to move the code after it to inside the FB.api
callback:
FB.api('/' + result[i].user_id + '?fields=name', function(AuthName) {
console.log(AuthName);
alert(AuthName.name);
authname = AuthName.name;
html = '<p>' + result[i].comment + '<br><hr>Date Added: ' + result[i].date + ' by ' + pic + ' ' + authname + '<br><hr><hr></p>';
$('#comms').append(html);
});
You also have a variable scope problem because of the for
loop. One of the ways to fix this is to use a separate function to create the callback. Add this right after your $(window).load
block, before </script>
:
function createFbApiCallback(jsonResult) {
return function(AuthName) {
var authname = AuthName.name;
var pic = '<img src="https://graph.facebook.com/' + jsonResult.user_id + '/picture&type=small" align="middle" />';
var html = '<p>' + jsonResult.comment + '<br><hr>Date Added: ' + jsonResult.date + ' by ' + pic + ' ' + authname + '<br><hr><hr></p>';
$('#comms').append(html);
}
}
Then change your loop to this:
for(var i = 0; i < len; i++) {
FB.api('/' + result[i].user_id + '?fields=name', createFbApiCallback(result[i]));
}
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 5115
If you have to execute code that relies on a callback function inside another callback function, execute your code inside the most inner callback function. In your case, move all that is out of the FB API callback to be inside it, so all your DOM manipulation is done only when both the AJAX response and the FB.api response has returned.
Upvotes: 0