Introduction
TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript with lot of benefits over plain JavaScript code. Mostly it is object oriented and compile time safety i.e. your code will not build if there is something wrong in the script which is not possible in plain JavaScript. Those not familiar with TypeScript please spend some time here before reading further.
Background
The idea began when we noticed the developers writing code to call ajax methods in each page they develop that leads to lot of duplicates and maintenance nightmare. So we decided to extract all ajax calls into a single TypeScript file and let the developers call only the methods exposed by it. It has a lot of benefits
- better control
- global error handling. if the calling code does not handle error then the global error handler handles it
- easy maintenance
- flexible
Using the code
Let's look at the complete Ajax code here
module Ajax {
export class Options {
url: string;
method: string;
data: Object;
constructor(url: string, method?: string, data?: Object) {
this.url = url;
this.method = method || "get";
this.data = data || {};
}
}
export class Service {
public request = (options: Options, successCallback: Function, errorCallback?: Function): void => {
var that = this;
$.ajax({
url: options.url,
type: options.method,
data: options.data,
cache: false,
success: function (d) {
successCallback(d);
},
error: function (d) {
if (errorCallback) {
errorCallback(d);
return;
}
var errorTitle = "Error in (" + options.url + ")";
var fullError = JSON.stringify(d);
console.log(errorTitle);
console.log(fullError);
that.showJqueryDialog(fullError, errorTitle);
}
});
}
public get = (url: string, successCallback: Function, errorCallback?: Function): void => {
this.request(new Options(url), successCallback, errorCallback);
}
public getWithDataInput = (url: string, data: Object, successCallback: Function, errorCallback?: Function): void => {
this.request(new Options(url, "get", data), successCallback, errorCallback);
}
public post = (url: string, successCallback: Function, errorCallback?: Function): void => {
this.request(new Options(url, "post"), successCallback, errorCallback);
}
public postWithData = (url: string, data: Object, successCallback: Function, errorCallback?: Function): void => {
this.request(new Options(url, "post", data), successCallback, errorCallback);
}
public showJqueryDialog = (message: string, title?: string, height?: number): void => {
alert(title + "\n" + message);
title = title || "Info";
height = height || 120;
message = message.replace("\r", "").replace("\n", "<br/>");
$("<div title='" + title + "'><p>" + message + "</p></div>").dialog({
minHeight: height,
minWidth: 400,
maxHeight: 500,
modal: true,
buttons: {
Ok: function () { $(this).dialog('close'); }
}
});
}
}
}
And the sample client
module MySite {
export class CustomerPage {
constructor() {
this.loadCustomers();
}
loadCustomers = (): void => {
var service = new Ajax.Service();
var customerUrl = "http://mysiteapi/customer";
var options = new Ajax.Options(customerUrl);
service.request(options, function (d) {
$("#grid").html(d);
});
var options = new Ajax.Options(customerUrl);
service.request(options, function (d) {
$("#grid").html(d);
}, function (d) {
alert("Error - " + d);
});
service.get(customerUrl, function (d) {
$("#grid").html(d);
});
service.getWithDataInput(customerUrl, { ProductId: 1 }, function (d) {
$("#grid").html(d);
});
}
}
}
I guess you understand most of them how it works by looking at the code, however let me brief how this is done
You have two modules
Ajax
- it has two classes Options
and Service
. Service
class offers method for making ajax calls. request
is all-in-one where you can use it for any kind of calls whereas the other methods are for specific purpose. get
can be used only for get request while post
method used only for post request MySite
- this is where you put page specific or module specifc scripts which uses Ajax module for making ajax calls. In the example above I have provided four different ways you make ajax calls to get customer records and that gave you an idea of how to use other methods.