Mastering Ajax, Part 1: Introduction to AjaxUnderstanding Ajax, a productive approach to building Web sites, and how it works ![]() |
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Level: Introductory Brett McLaughlin (brett@oreilly.com), Author and Editor, O'Reilly and Associates 06 Dec 2005 Ajax, which consists of HTML, JavaScript™ technology, DHTML, and DOM, is an outstanding approach that helps you transform clunky Web interfaces into interactive Ajax applications. The author, an Ajax expert, demonstrates how these technologies work together -- from an overview to a detailed look -- to make extremely efficient Web development an easy reality. He also unveils the central concepts of Ajax, including the XMLHttpRequest object. Five years ago, if you didn't know XML, you were the ugly duckling whom nobody talked to. Eighteen months ago, Ruby came into the limelight and programmers who didn't know what was going on with Ruby weren't welcome at the water cooler. Today, if you want to get into the latest technology rage, Ajax is where it's at. However, Ajax is far more than just a fad; it's a powerful approach to building Web sites and it's not nearly as hard to learn as an entire new language. Before I dig into what Ajax is, though, let's spend just a few moments understanding what Ajax does. When you write an application today, you have two basic choices:
These are both familiar; desktop applications usually come on a CD (or sometimes are downloaded from a Web site) and install completely on your computer. They might use the Internet to download updates, but the code that runs these applications resides on your desktop. Web applications -- and there's no surprise here -- run on a Web server somewhere and you access the application with your Web browser. More important than where the code for these applications runs, though, is how the applications behave and how you interact with them. Desktop applications are usually pretty fast (they're running on your computer; you're not waiting on an Internet connection), have great user interfaces (usually interacting with your operating system), and are incredibly dynamic. You can click, point, type, pull up menus and sub-menus, and cruise around, with almost no waiting around. On the other hand, Web applications are usually up-to-the-second current and they provide services you could never get on your desktop (think about Amazon.com and eBay). However, with the power of the Web comes waiting -- waiting for a server to respond, waiting for a screen to refresh, waiting for a request to come back and generate a new page. Obviously this is a bit of an oversimplification, but you get the basic idea. As you might already be suspecting, Ajax attempts to bridge the gap between the functionality and interactivity of a desktop application and the always-updated Web application. You can use dynamic user interfaces and fancier controls like you'd find on a desktop application, but it's available to you on a Web application. So what are you waiting for? Start looking at Ajax and how to turn your clunky Web interfaces into responsive Ajax applications. When it comes to Ajax, the reality is that it involves a lot of technologies -- to get beyond the basics, you need to drill down into several different technologies (which is why I'll spend the first several articles in this series breaking apart each one of them). The good news is that you might already know a decent bit about many of these technologies -- better yet, most of these individual technologies are easy to learn -- certainly not as difficult as an entire programming language like Java or Ruby.
Here are the basic technologies involved in Ajax applications:
Let's break these down and get a better idea of what each does. I'll delve into each of these more in future articles; for now focus on becoming familiar with these components and technologies. The more familiar you are with this code, the easier it will be to move from casual knowledge about these technologies to mastering each (and really blowing the doors off of your Web application development). The first object you want to understand is probably the one that's newest to you; it's called Listing 1. Create a new XMLHttpRequest object
I'll talk more about this object in the next article, but for now realize that this is the object that handles all your server communication. Before you go forward, stop and think about that -- it's the JavaScript technology through the In a normal Web application, users fill out form fields and click a Submit button. Then, the entire form is sent to the server, the server passes on processing to a script (usually PHP or Java or maybe a CGI process or something similar), and when the script is done, it sends back a completely new page. That page might be HTML with a new form with some data filled in or it might be a confirmation or perhaps a page with certain options selected based on data entered in the original form. Of course, while the script or program on the server is processing and returning a new form, users have to wait. Their screen will go blank and then be redrawn as data comes back from the server. This is where low interactivity comes into play -- users don't get instant feedback and they certainly don't feel like they're working on a desktop application. Ajax essentially puts JavaScript technology and the Then, the server sends data back to your JavaScript code (still standing in for the Web form) which decides what to do with that data. It can update form fields on the fly, giving that immediate feeling to your application -- users are getting new data without their form being submitted or refreshed. The JavaScript code could even get the data, perform some calculations, and send another request, all without user intervention! This is the power of Once you get a handle on
For those first two items, you want to be very familiar with the Listing 2. Grab and set field values with JavaScript code
There's nothing particularly remarkable here and that's good! You should start to realize that there's nothing tremendously complicated about this. Once you master Last but not least, there's the DOM, the Document Object Model. For some of you, hearing about the DOM is going to be a little intimidating -- it's not often used by HTML designers and is even somewhat unusual for JavaScript coders unless you're really into some high-end programming tasks. Where you will find the DOM in use a lot is in heavy-duty Java and C/C++ programs; in fact, that's probably where the DOM got a bit of its reputation for being difficult or hard to learn. Fortunately, using the DOM in JavaScript technology is easy, and is mostly intuitive. At this point, I'd normally show you how to use the DOM or at least give you a few code examples, but even that would be misleading. You see, you can get pretty far into Ajax without having to mess with the DOM and that's the path I'm going to show you. I'll come back to the DOM in a future article, but for now, just know that it's out there. When you start to send XML back and forth between your JavaScript code and the server and really change the HTML form, you'll dig back into DOM. For now, it's easy to get some effective Ajax going without it, so put this on the back-burner for now.
With a basic overview under your belt, you're ready to look at a few specifics. Since Remember those pesky browser wars from a few years back and how nothing worked the same across browsers? Well, believe it or not, those wars are still going on albeit on a much smaller scale. And, surprise: Working with Microsoft browsers Microsoft's browser, Internet Explorer, uses the MSXML parser for handling XML (you can find out more about MSXML in Resources). So when you write Ajax applications that need to work on Internet Explorer, you need to create the object in a particular way. However, it's not that easy. MSXML actually has two different versions floating around depending on the version of JavaScript technology installed in Internet Explorer, so you've got to write code that handles both cases. Look at Listing 3 for the code that you need to create an Listing 3. Create an XMLHttpRequest object on Microsoft browsers
All of this won't make exact sense yet, but that's OK. You'll dig into JavaScript programming, error handling, conditional compilation, and more before this series is finished. For now, you want to get two core lines into your head:
and
In a nutshell, this code tries to create the object using one version of MSXML; if that fails, it then creates the object using the other version. Nice, huh? If neither of these work, the Dealing with Mozilla and non-Microsoft browsers If Internet Explorer isn't your browser of choice or you write code for non-Microsoft browsers, then you need different code. In fact, this is the really simple line of code you saw back in Listing 1:
This much simpler line creates an The key is to support all browsers. Who wants to write an application that works just on Internet Explorer or an application that works just on non-Microsoft browsers? Worse yet, do you want to write your application twice? Of course not! So your code combines support for both Internet Explorerand non-Microsoft browsers. Listing 4 shows the code to do just that. Listing 4. Create an XMLHttpRequest object the multi-browser way
For now, ignore the commenting and weird tags like
At the end of this process, What about security? Today's browsers offer users the ability to crank their security levels up, to turn off JavaScript technology, and disable any number of options in their browser. In these cases, your code probably won't work under any circumstances. For these situations, you'll have to handle problems gracefully -- that's at least one article in itself, one I will tackle later (it's going to be a long series, isn't it? Don't worry; you'll master all of this before you're through). For now, you're writing robust, but not perfect, code, which is great for getting a handle on Ajax. You'll come back to the finer details.
Request/Response in an Ajax world So you now understand Ajax and have a basic idea about the What's the missing piece? How to actually use You have your shiny new
Listing 5 is a sample of an Ajax method that does these very things, in this order: Listing 5. Make a request with Ajax
A lot of this is self-explanatory. The first bit of the code uses basic JavaScript code to grab the values of a few form fields. Then the code sets up a PHP script as the destination to connect to. Notice how the URL of the script is specified and then the city and state (from the form) are appended to this using simple GET parameters. Next, a connection is opened; here's the first place you see The Finally, If you don't get anything else out of this, notice how straightforward and simple this is! Other than getting the asynchronous nature of Ajax into your head, this is relatively simple stuff. You'll appreciate how it frees you up to concentrate on cool applications and interfaces rather than complicated HTTP request/response code. The code in Listing 5 is about as easy as it gets. The data is simple text and can be included as part of the request URL. GET sends the request rather than the more complicated POST. There's no XML or content headers to add, no data to send in the body of the request -- this is Ajax Utopia, in other words. Have no fear; things will become more complicated as this series progresses. You'll learn how to send POST requests, how to set request headers and content types, how to encode XML in your message, how to add security to your request -- the list is pretty long! Don't worry about the hard stuff for now; get your head around the basics, and you'll soon build up a whole arsenal of Ajax tools. Now you need to actually deal with the server's response. You really only need to know two things at this point:
The first of these -- ready states -- is going to take up the bulk of the next article; you'll learn more about the stages of an HTTP request than you ever wanted to know. For now, if you simply check for a certain value (4), things will work (and you'll have something to look forward to in the next article). The second item -- using the Listing 6. Handle the server's response
Again, this code isn't so difficult or complicated. It waits for the server to call it with the right ready state and then uses the value that the server returns (in this case, the ZIP code for the user-entered city and state) to set the value of another form field. The result is that the Observant readers might notice that the
So what's left? Actually, not much. You have a JavaScript method that grabs information that the user put into a form, sends it to the server, provides another JavaScript method to listen for and handle a response, and even sets the value of a field when that response comes back. All that's really left is to call that first JavaScript method and start the whole process. You could obviously add a button to your HTML form, but that's pretty 2001, don't you think? Take advantage of JavaScript technology like in Listing 7. Listing 7. Kick off an Ajax process
If this feels like yet one more piece of fairly routine code, then you're right -- it is! When a user puts in a new value for either the city or state field, the
At this point, you're probably not ready to go out and write your first Ajax application -- at least, not unless you're willing to do some real digging in the Resources section. However, you can start to get the basic idea of how these applications work and a basic understanding of the For now, though, spend some time thinking about just how powerful Ajax applications can be. Imagine a Web form that responds to you not just when you click a button, but when you type into a field, when you select an option from a combo box...even when you drag your mouse around the screen. Think about exactly what asynchronous means; think about JavaScript code running and not waiting on the server to respond to its requests. What sorts of problems can you run into? What areas do you watch out for? And how will the design of your forms change to account for this new approach in programming? If you spend some real time with these issues, you'll be better served than just having some code you can cut-and-paste and throw into an application that you really don't understand. In the next article, you'll put these ideas into practice and I'll give you the details on the code you need to really make applications like this work. So, until then, enjoy the possibilities of Ajax. |