Reputation: 3829
I am completely lost on this; I am using NodeJS to fetch a JSON and I need to pass the variable to my page and have JavaScript use the data.
app.get('/test', function(req, res) {
res.render('testPage', {
myVar: 'My Data'
});
That is my Express code (very simple for testing purposes); now using EJS I want to gather this data which I know to render on the page is simply
<%= myVar %>
But I need to be able to gather this data in JavaScript (if possible within a .js file) but for now just to display the variable in an Alert box I have tried
In Jade it is like alert('!{myVar}')
or !{JSON.stringify(myVar)}
. Can I do something similar in EJS. I don't need any field like <input type=hidden>
and taking the value of the field in javascript. If anyone can help be much appreciated
Upvotes: 49
Views: 103151
Reputation: 151
I had the similar problem. i got the value
var inJavascript = JSON.parse("<%= myVar %>");
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 8712
Heres how i made it work, in node js pass the json like this
let j =[];
//sample json
j.push({data:"hi});
res.render('index',{json:j});
now in js function
var json = JSON.parse('<%- JSON.stringify(json) %>');
This worked well for me
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 131
The main difficulty here is to avoid XSS risks if myVar contains quotes, or </script>
for example. To avoid this problem, I propose to use Base64 encoding after JSON.stringify. This would avoid all risks related to quotes or HTML tags since Base64 only contains "safe" characters to put in a quoted string.
The solution I propose:
EJS file:
<script>
var myVar = <%- passValue(myVar) %>
</script>
which will render into something like (for example here myVar = null):
<script>
var myVar = JSON.parse(Base64.decode("bnVsbA=="))
</script>
Server-side NodeJS:
function passValue(value) {
return 'JSON.parse(Base64.decode("' + new Buffer(JSON.stringify(value)).toString('base64') + '"))'
}
Client-side JS (this is an implementation of Base64 decoding that works with Unicode, you can use another if you prefer but be careful if it supports Unicode):
var Base64={_keyStr:"ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/=",encode:function(e){var t="";var n,r,i,s,o,u,a;var f=0;e=Base64._utf8_encode(e);while(f<e.length){n=e.charCodeAt(f++);r=e.charCodeAt(f++);i=e.charCodeAt(f++);s=n>>2;o=(n&3)<<4|r>>4;u=(r&15)<<2|i>>6;a=i&63;if(isNaN(r)){u=a=64}else if(isNaN(i)){a=64}t=t+this._keyStr.charAt(s)+this._keyStr.charAt(o)+this._keyStr.charAt(u)+this._keyStr.charAt(a)}return t},decode:function(e){var t="";var n,r,i;var s,o,u,a;var f=0;e=e.replace(/[^A-Za-z0-9\+\/\=]/g,"");while(f<e.length){s=this._keyStr.indexOf(e.charAt(f++));o=this._keyStr.indexOf(e.charAt(f++));u=this._keyStr.indexOf(e.charAt(f++));a=this._keyStr.indexOf(e.charAt(f++));n=s<<2|o>>4;r=(o&15)<<4|u>>2;i=(u&3)<<6|a;t=t+String.fromCharCode(n);if(u!=64){t=t+String.fromCharCode(r)}if(a!=64){t=t+String.fromCharCode(i)}}t=Base64._utf8_decode(t);return t},_utf8_encode:function(e){e=e.replace(/\r\n/g,"\n");var t="";for(var n=0;n<e.length;n++){var r=e.charCodeAt(n);if(r<128){t+=String.fromCharCode(r)}else if(r>127&&r<2048){t+=String.fromCharCode(r>>6|192);t+=String.fromCharCode(r&63|128)}else{t+=String.fromCharCode(r>>12|224);t+=String.fromCharCode(r>>6&63|128);t+=String.fromCharCode(r&63|128)}}return t},_utf8_decode:function(e){var t="";var n=0;var r=c1=c2=0;while(n<e.length){r=e.charCodeAt(n);if(r<128){t+=String.fromCharCode(r);n++}else if(r>191&&r<224){c2=e.charCodeAt(n+1);t+=String.fromCharCode((r&31)<<6|c2&63);n+=2}else{c2=e.charCodeAt(n+1);c3=e.charCodeAt(n+2);t+=String.fromCharCode((r&15)<<12|(c2&63)<<6|c3&63);n+=3}}return t}}
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 2688
In the accepted solution JSON.parse will fail if myVar has a property with value with unescaped double quote. So better traverseObj and escape each string property.
Here is a function that covers my case:
function traverseObj (obj, callback)
{
var result = {};
if ( !isArray(obj) && !isObject(obj) ) {
return callback(obj);
}
for ( var key in obj ) {
if ( obj.hasOwnProperty(key) ) {
var value = obj[key];
if (isMongoId(value)){
var newValue = callback(value.toString());
result[key] = newValue;
}
else if (isArray ( value) ) {
var newArr = [];
for ( var i=0; i < value.length; i++ ) {
var arrVal = traverseObj(value[i], callback);
newArr.push(arrVal);
}
result[key] = newArr;
}
else if ( isObject(value) ) {
result[key] = traverseObj(value, callback);
}
else {
var newValue = callback(value);
result[key] = newValue;
}
}
}
return result;
};
Than in ejs you simply has to:
<%
var encodeValue = function(val) {
if ( typeof val === 'string' ) {
return sanitizeXSS(val); //use some library (example npm install xss)
}
return val;
}
var encodedProduct = ejs_utils.traverseObj(product, encodeValue);
%>
and now you can transport is safely with unescaped syntax
window.product = <%-JSON.stringify(encodedProduct)%>;
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 693
if you have more complex objects like an array, you can do this :
<% if (myVar) { %>
<script>
myVar = JSON.parse('<%- JSON.stringify(myVar) %>');
</script>
<% } %>
otherwise, previous solutions you have seen will not work
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 203534
You could use this (client-side):
<script>
var myVar = <%- JSON.stringify(myVar) %>;
</script>
You could also get EJS to render a .js
file:
app.get('/test.js', function(req, res) {
res.set('Content-Type', 'application/javascript');
res.render('testPage', { myVar : ... });
});
However, the template file (testPage
) would still need to have the .html
extension, otherwise EJS won't find it (unless you tell Express otherwise).
As @ksloan points out in the comments: you do have to be careful what myVar
contains. If it contains user-generated content, this may leave your site open for script injection attacks.
A possible solution to prevent this from happening:
<script>
function htmlDecode(input){
var e = document.createElement('div');
e.innerHTML = input;
return e.childNodes.length === 0 ? "" : e.childNodes[0].nodeValue;
}
var myVar = JSON.parse(htmlDecode("<%= JSON.stringify(myVar) %>"));
</script>
Upvotes: 80
Reputation: 113
Per the documentation here:
Go to the Latest Release, download ./ejs.js or ./ejs.min.js.
Include one of these on your page, and ejs.render(str)
.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 26940
Try this:
<script type="text/javascript">
window.addEventListener('load', function(){
alert('<%= myVar %>');
});
</script>
Upvotes: 4