Mithril 2.0.0-rc.8

jsonp(options)


Description

Makes JSON-P requests. Typically, it's useful to interact with servers that allow JSON-P but that don't have CORS enabled.

m.jsonp({
    url: "/api/v1/users/:id",
    params: {id: 1},
    callbackKey: "callback",
})
.then(function(result) {
    console.log(result)
})

Signature

promise = m.jsonp(options)

Argument Type Required Description
options Object Yes The request options to pass.
options.url String Yes The path name to send the request to, optionally interpolated with values from options.params.
options.params Object No The data to be interpolated into the URL and serialized into the querystring.
options.type any = Function(any) No A constructor to be applied to each object in the response. Defaults to the identity function.
options.callbackName String No The name of the function that will be called as the callback. Defaults to a randomized string (e.g. _mithril_6888197422121285_0({a: 1})
options.callbackKey String No The name of the querystring parameter name that specifies the callback name. Defaults to callback (e.g. /someapi?callback=_mithril_6888197422121285_0)
options.background Boolean No If false, redraws mounted components upon completion of the request. If true, it does not. Defaults to false.
returns Promise A promise that resolves to the response data, after it has been piped through type method

promise = m.jsonp(url, options)

Argument Type Required Description
url String Yes The path name to send the request to. options.url overrides this when present.
options Object No The request options to pass.
returns Promise A promise that resolves to the response data, after it has been piped through the type method

This second form is mostly equivalent to m.jsonp(Object.assign({url: url}, options)), just it does not depend on the ES6 global Object.assign internally.

How to read signatures


How it works

The m.jsonp utility is useful for third party APIs that can return data in JSON-P format.

In a nutshell, JSON-P consists of creating a script tag whose src attribute points to a script that lives in the server outside of your control. Typically, you are required to define a global function and specify its name in the querystring of the script's URL. The response will return code that calls your global function, passing the server's data as the first parameter.

JSON-P has several limitations: it can only use GET requests, it implicitly trusts that the third party server won't serve malicious code and it requires polluting the global JavaScript scope. Nonetheless, it is sometimes the only available way to retrieve data from a service (for example, if the service doesn't support CORS).


Typical usage

Some services follow the de-facto convention of responding with JSON-P if a callback querystring key is provided, thus making m.jsonp automatically work without any effort:

m.jsonp({url: "https://api.github.com/users/lhorie"}).then(function(response) {
    console.log(response.data.login) // logs "lhorie"
})

Some services do not follow conventions and therefore you must specify the callback key that the service expects:

m.jsonp({
    url: "https://api.flickr.com/services/feeds/photos_public.gne?tags=kitten&format=json",
    callbackKey: "jsoncallback",
})
.then(function(response) {
    console.log(response.link) // logs "https://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/kitten/"
})

And sometimes, you just want to take advantage of HTTP caching for GET requests for rarely-modified data:

// this request is always called with the same querystring, and therefore it is cached
m.jsonp({
    url: "https://api.github.com/users/lhorie",
    callbackName: "__callback",
})
.then(function(response) {
    console.log(response.data.login) // logs "lhorie"
})

License: MIT. © Leo Horie.