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TOP COLDFUSION LINKS AJAXWorld News Desk What Is AJAX?
AJAX isn't a technology, or a language, and there's no recipe to implement it
By: Rob Gonda
Sep. 10, 2007 05:15 PM
Now let's create a small application that could actually benefit you. How many times have you created a registration form that can validate almost everything client-side by using JavaScript, but the username has to be validated upon submission, and if it already exists, you either have to abort and use JavaScript for the alert and send the client back, or cflocate and populate all the form fields by using the session. Wouldn't it be great if we could avoid all that and simple check the username as another JavaScript call? And not even think of creating an existing username array and have it local in the registration form? It 's not that much different from the file we have. Let's modify the index.cfm file a little. We'll create a basic user registration form with a single fieldname called user and we'll pass that value to the AJAX call. The tricky part here is that AJAX is asynchronous, which means that the function won't return the value you need. Instead the callback function will get called on a different thread. Not to worry, I'll demonstrate how this can be done.
model.cfm Index.cfm now contains a user registration form. On submit, we'll call checkUser(). Note that we must actually call it with a return parameter or we'll always return false! No matter what happens, the form won't get submitted the traditional way. Note that I included 'utils.js' only to call the 'useLoadingMessage' function, which imitates the Gmail loading message while AJAX makes its round trip. 'Execute' sets a callback function, which checks for the ColdFusion return. If true, we'll display an error message, and if the user doesn't exist, we'll manually submit the form by using the JavaScript submit() function. The only difference in the execute call is that we pass the form value to the ColdFusion model. The CFM page is straightforward: all we're doing is a dummy check against a hard-coded list. This is the place where you would put your queries or invoke your components. You should now be able to set up an AJAX engine, a simple HTML view, make a call, listen, process, and respond using ColdFusion, and process the response in your callback function. In the next part of this article, I'll explain how to pass complex objects by using WDDX serialization, populate tables, use innerHTML properties for advanced JavaScript view manipulations, and provide a full internal rotating banners application that tracks impressions and clicks. I will also cover cross-browser compatibility and offer some little tricks to make your AJAX application as widely compatible as possible. CFDJ LATEST STORIES . . .
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