m.request
This is a high-level utility for working with web services, which allows writing asynchronous code relatively procedurally.
By default, it assumes server responses are in JSON format and optionally instantiates a class with the response data.
It provides a number of useful features out of the box:
- The ability to get an early reference to a container that will hold the asynchronous response
- The ability to queue operations to be performed after the asynchronous request completes
- The ability to "cast" the response to a class of your choice
- The ability to unwrap data in a response that includes metadata properties
Basic usage
The basic usage pattern for m.request
returns an m.prop
getter-setter, which is populated when the AJAX request completes.
The returned getter-setter can be thought of as a box: you can pass this reference around cheaply, and you can "unwrap" its value when needed.
var users = m.request({method: "GET", url: "/user"});
//assuming the response contains the following data: `[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]`
//then when resolved (e.g. in a view), the `users` getter-setter will contain a list of users
//i.e. users() //[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]
Note that this getter-setter holds an undefined value until the AJAX request completes. Attempting to unwrap its value early will likely result in errors.
The returned getter-setter also implements the promise interface (also known as a thennable): this is the mechanism you should always use to queue operations to be performed on the data from the web service.
The simplest use case of this feature is to implement functional value assignment via m.prop
(i.e. the same thing as above). You can bind a pre-existing getter-setter by passing it in as a parameter to a .then
method:
var users = m.prop([]); //default value
m.request({method: "GET", url: "/user"}).then(users)
//assuming the response contains the following data: `[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]`
//then when resolved (e.g. in a view), the `users` getter-setter will contain a list of users
//i.e. users() //[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]
This syntax allows you to bind intermediate results before piping them down for further processing, for example:
var users = m.prop([]); //default value
var doSomething = function() { /*...*/ }
m.request({method: "GET", url: "/user"}).then(users).then(doSomething)
While both basic assignment syntax and thennable syntax can be used to the same effect, typically it's recommended that you use the assignment syntax whenever possible, as it's easier to read.
The thennable mechanism is intended to be used in 3 ways:
- in the model layer: to process web service data in transformative ways (e.g. filtering a list based on a parameter that the web service doesn't support)
- in the controller layer: to bind redirection code upon a condition
- in the controller layer: to bind error messages
Processing web service data
This step is meant to be done in the model layer. Doing it in the controller level is also possible, but philosophically not recommended, because by tying logic to a controller, the code becomes harder to reuse due to unrelated controller dependencies.
In the example below, the listEven
method returns a getter-setter that resolves to a list of users containing only users whose id is even.
//model
var User = {}
User.listEven = function() {
return m.request({method: "GET", url: "/user"}).then(function(list) {
return list.filter(function(user) {return user.id % 2 == 0});
});
}
//controller
var controller = function() {
this.users = User.listEven()
}
Bind redirection code
This step is meant to be done in the controller layer. Doing it in the model level is also possible, but philosophically not recommended, because by tying redirection to the model, the code becomes harder to reuse due to overly tight coupling.
In the example below, we use the previously defined listEven
model method and queue a controller-level function that redirects to another page if the user list is empty.
//controller
var controller = function() {
this.users = User.listEven().then(function(users) {
if (users.length == 0) m.route("/add");
})
}
Binding errors
Mithril thennables take two functions as optional parameters: the first parameter is called if the web service request completes successfully. The second one is called if it completes with an error.
Error binding is meant to be done in the controller layer. Doing it in the model level is also possible, but generally leads to more code in order to connect all the dots.
In the example below, we bind an error getter-setter to our previous controller so that the error
variable gets populated if the server throws an error.
//controller
var controller = function() {
this.error = m.prop("")
this.users = User.listEven().then(function(users) {
if (users.length == 0) m.route("/add");
}, this.error)
}
If the controller doesn't already have a success callback to run after a request resolves, you can still bind errors like this:
//controller
var controller = function() {
this.error = m.prop("")
this.users = User.listEven().then(null, this.error)
}
Queuing Operations
As you saw, you can chain operations that act on the response data. Typically this is required in three situations:
- in model-level methods if client-side processing is needed to make the data useful for a controller or view.
- in the controller, to redirect after a model service resolves.
- in the controller, to bind error messages
In the example below, we take advantage of queuing to debug the ajax response data prior to doing further processing on the user list
var users = m.request({method: "GET", url: "/user"})
.then(console.log);
.then(function(users) {
//add one more user to the response
return users.concat({name: "Jane"})
})
//assuming the response contains the following data: `[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]`
//then when resolved (e.g. in a view), the `users` getter-setter will contain a list of users
//i.e. users() //[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}, {name: "Jane"}]
Casting the Response Data to a Class
It's possible to auto-cast a JSON response to a class. This is useful when we want to control access to certain properties in an object, as opposed to exposing all the fields in POJOs (plain old javascript objects) for arbitrary processing.
In the example below, User.list
returns a list of User
instances.
var User = function(data) {
this.name = m.prop(data.name);
}
User.list = function() {
return m.request({method: "GET", url: "/user", type: User});
}
var users = User.list();
//assuming the response contains the following data: `[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]`
//then when resolved (e.g. in a view), `users` will contain a list of User instances
//i.e. users()[0].name() == "John"
Unwrapping Response Data
Often, web services return the relevant data wrapped in objects that contain metadata.
Mithril allows you to unwrap the relevant data, by providing two callback hooks: unwrapSuccess
and unwrapError
.
These hooks allow you to unwrap different parts of the response data depending on whether it succeed or failed.
var users = m.request({
method: "GET",
url: "/user",
unwrapSuccess: function(response) {
return response.data;
},
unwrapError: function(response) {
return response.error;
}
});
//assuming the response is: `{data: [{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}], count: 2}`
//then when resolved (e.g. in a view), the `users` getter-setter will contain a list of users
//i.e. users() //[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]
Using Different Data Transfer Formats
By default, m.request
uses JSON to send and receive data to web services. You can override this by providing serialize
and deserialize
options:
var users = m.request({
method: "GET",
url: "/user",
serialize: mySerializer,
deserialize: myDeserializer
});
One typical way to override this is to receive as-is responses. The example below shows how to receive a plain string from a txt file.
var file = m.request({
method: "GET",
url: "myfile.txt",
deserialize: function(value) {return value;}
});
Signature
Promise request(XHROptions options)
where:
Promise :: GetterSetter { Promise then(any successCallback(any value), any errorCallback(any value)) }
GetterSetter :: any getterSetter([any value])
XHROptions :: Object {
String method,
String url,
[String user,]
[String password,]
[Object<any> data,]
[Response unwrapSuccess(Response data),]
[Response unwrapError(Response data),]
[String serialize(any dataToSerialize),]
[any deserialize(String dataToDeserialize),]
[void type(Object<any> data),]
[void config(XMLHttpRequest xhr, XHROptions options)]
}
Response :: Object<any> | Array<any>
XHROptions options
A map of options for the XMLHttpRequest
String method
The HTTP method. Must be either
"GET"
,"POST"
,"PUT"
,"DELETE"
,"HEAD"
or"OPTIONS"
String url
The URL to request. If the URL is not in the same domain as the application, the target server must be configured to accept cross-domain requests from the application's domain, i.e. its responses must include the header
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
.String user (optional)
A user for HTTP authentication. Defaults to
undefined
String password (optional)
A password for HTTP authentication. Defaults to
undefined
String password (optional)
A password for HTTP authentication. Defaults to
undefined
Object
data (optional)Data to be sent. It's automatically placed in the appropriate section of the request with the appropriate serialization based on
method
Response unwrapSuccess(Response data) (optional)
A preprocessor function to extract the data from a success response in case the response contains metadata wrapping the data.
The default value (if this parameter is falsy) is the identity function
function(value) {return value}
For example, if the response is
{data: [{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]}
and the unwrap function isfunction(response) {return response.data}
, then the response will be considered to be[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]
when processing thetype
parameterObject
| Array data The data to unwrap
returns Object
| Array unwrappedData The unwrapped data
String unwrapError(Response data) (optional)
A preprocessor function to extract the data from an error response in case the response contains metadata wrapping the data.
The default value (if this parameter is falsy) is the identity function
function(value) {return value}
Object
| Array data The data to unwrap
returns Object
| Array unwrappedData The unwrapped data
String serialize(any dataToSerialize) (optional)
Method to use to serialize the request data
The default value (if this parameter is falsy) is
JSON.stringify
any dataToSerialize
Data to be serialized
returns String serializedData
any deserialize(String dataToDeserialize) (optional)
Method to use to deserialize the response data
The default value (if this parameter is falsy) is
JSON.parse
String dataToDeserialize
Data to be deserialized
returns any deserializedData
void type(Object
data) (optional)The response object (or the child items if this object is an Array) will be passed as a parameter to the class constructor defined by
type
If this parameter is falsy, the deserialized data will not be wrapped.
For example, if
type
is the following class:var User = function(data) { this.name = m.prop(data.name); }
And the data is
[{name: "John"}, {name: "Mary"}]
, then the response will contain an array of two User instances.void config(XMLHttpRequest xhr, XHROptions options) (optional)
An initialization function that runs after
open
and beforesend
. Useful for adding request headers and when using XHR2 features, such as the XMLHttpRequest'supload
property.XMLHttpRequest xhr
The XMLHttpRequest instance.
XHROptions options
The
options
parameter that was passed intom.request
call
returns Promise promise
returns a promise that can bind callbacks which get called on completion of the AJAX request.