- Explain how to fetch data with
fetch()
- Working around backwards compatibility issues
- Identify examples of the AJAX technique on popular websites
When it comes to making engaging web sites, we often find ourselves needing to send a lot of data (text, images, media, etc.) so that the page is exciting.
But browsers won't show anything until they've processed all the of that data. As a result, they show nothing. The screen stays blank and users experience "waiting."
Too much waiting means visitors will click away and never come back. Web users expect sites to load quickly and to stay updated. Research shows that 40 percent of visitors to a website will leave if the site takes more than 3 seconds to load. Mobile users are even less patient.
To solve this problem and help provide lots of other really great features, we developed a technique called AJAX.
In AJAX we:
- Deliver an initial, engaging page using HTML and CSS which browsers render quickly
- Then we use JavaScript to add more to the DOM, behind the scenes
AJAX relies on several technologies:
- Things called
Promise
s - Things called
XMLHttpRequestObject
s - A serialization format called JSON for "JavaScript Object Notation"
- asynchronous Input / Output
- the event loop
Part of what makes AJAX complicated to learn is that to understand it
thoroughly, you need to understand all these components. For the moment,
however, we're going to gloss over all these pieces in this lesson. It just so
happens that modern browsers have abstracted all those components into a
single function called fetch()
. While someone interviewing to be a front-end
developer will be expected to be able to explain all those components above
(which we will cover later), while we're getting the hang of things, we're
going to simplify our task by using fetch()
.
Let's learn to use fetch()
to apply the AJAX technique: a way to load
additional data after information is presented to the user.
The fetch()
function retrieves data. It's a global method on the window
object. That means you can use it simply by calling fetch()
and passing in a
path to a resource as an argument. To use the data that is returned by the
fetch()
, we need to chain on the then()
method. We can see what this looks
like below:
fetch("string representing a URL to a data source")
.then(function(response) {
return response.json();
})
.then(function(json){
// Use the data inside of `json` to do DOM manipulation
})
Now let's add some multi-line (/*...*/
) comments (which JavaScript will
ignore) to describe what's happening:
fetch("string representing a URL to a data source")
/*
Here we are calling `fetch()` and passing a URL to a data source as the
argument. The function call returns an object that represents what the data
source sent back. It does *not* return the actual content. (More about this
later.)
*/
.then(function(response) {
return response.json();
})
/*
Next, we call the then() method on the object that comes back from the
`fetch()`. We capture the object into the `response` parameter so it can be
passed as an argument into a callback function.
Inside the callback function, we do whatever processing we need on the
object, in this case, converting it into JSON using the built-in `json()`
method. (Another commonly-used method is `text()`, which will convert the
response into plain text.) Finally, we return the JSON-ified response.
Note that we *have to return* the content that we've gotten out of the
response and converted to JSON in order to use the data in the next then()
method call.
This first callback function is usually only one line: returning the
content from the response after converting it into the format me need.
*/
.then(function(json){
// Use the data inside of `json` to do DOM manipulation
})
/*
This time, the `then()` method is receiving the object that we returned
from the first call to `then()` (our JSON-ified object, in this case). We
capture the object in the parameter `json` and pass it into a second
callback function, where we will write code to do DOM manipulation using
the data from the fetch
*/
Top Tip: As always, we can name the parameters being used in our callback functions anything we like, but most JavaScript developers use
response
andjson
by convention. Following the same naming convention is optional, but it will make your code more readable to other developers.
Let's fill out our base skeleton.
First, we'll provide a String
argument to fetch()
. As it happens,
http://api.open-notify.org/astros.json
will provide a list of the humans in
space. You can paste this URL into a browser tab and see that the data uses a
JSON structure.
JSON is a way to send a collection of data in the internet, formatted as a
String
. It just so happens that this string is written in a way that would be
valid JavaScript syntax for an Object
instance. Thus the name "JavaScript
Object Notation", or JSON ("jay-sawn"). Programmers find it very easy to think
about JavaScript Object
s, so they often send "stringified" versions of
Object
s as responses.
The then()
takes a function. Here is where you tell JavaScript to ask the
network response to be turned into JSON. When you first start using fetch()
,
most of your first then()
s are going have a callback function that looks like
this:
function(response) {
return response.json();
}
The final then()
is when you actually get some JSON (the return from the first
then()
) passed in. You can then do something with that JSON. The easiest
options are:
alert()
the JSONconsole.log()
the JSON- hand the JSON off to another function.
We'll go for the console.log()
approach:
function(json) {
console.log(json)
}
STRETCH: But you should be able to imagine that you could do some DOM manipulation instead.
Here's a completed example:
fetch('http://api.open-notify.org/astros.json')
.then(function(response) {
console.log(response);
return response.json();
})
.then(function(json) {
console.log(json);
});
Let's perform a demonstration. Navigate to http://open-notify.org in an incognito tab. We need to go incognito to make sure that none of your browsing history intereferes with this experiment.
Open up DevTools and paste the following into the console:
fetch('http://api.open-notify.org/astros.json')
.then(function(response) {
return response.json();
}).then(function(json) {
console.log(json);
console.log(`Holy cow! There are ${json["number"]} humans in space.`);
});
You might notice in the DevTools console that this chained method call returned
a Promise
. We'll cover that later.
As you can see, fetch()
provides us with a short way to fetch and work with
resources. However, fetch()
has only recently arrived in browsers. In older
code you might see jquery.ajax
or $.ajax
or an object called an
XMLHttpRequestObject
. These are distractions at this point in your education.
After working with fetch()
you'll be able to more easily integrate these
special topics.
The AJAX technique opens up a lot of uses!
- It allows us to pull in dynamic content. The same "framing" HTML page remains on screen for a cooking website. The recipe on display updates without page load. This approach was pioneered by GMail whose nav area is swapped for mail content swiftly โ thanks to AJAX.
- It allows us to get data from multiple sources. We could make a website that displays the current weather forecast and the current price of bitcoin side by side! This approach is used by most sites to render ads. Your content loads while JavaScript gets the ad to show and injects it into your page (sometimes AJAX can be used in a way that we don't entirely like).
Many pages use AJAX to provide users fast and engaging sites. It's certainly not required in all sites. In fact, using it could be a step backward if simple HTML would suffice. However, as sites have more and more material, the AJAX technique is a great tool to have.
Using fetch()
, we can include requests for data wherever we need to in
our code. We can fetch()
data on the click of a button or the expansion of an
accordion display. There are many older methods for fetching data, but
fetch()
is the future.