qd-ajax

Ember-friendly jQuery.ajax wrapper.

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import qdAjax from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/qd-ajax';
</script>

README

qd-ajax

Ember-friendly jQuery.ajax wrapper.

  • returns RSVP promises
  • makes apps more testable (resolves promises with Ember.run)
  • makes testing ajax simpler with fixture support

Installation

Browser Package

  1. bower install --save qd-ajax
  2. link to global or AMD build in Bower Components directory
    • Global - <script src="/bower_components/qd-ajax/dist/qd-ajax.js"></script>
    • AMD - <script src="/bower_components/qd-ajax/dist/qd-ajax.amd.js"></script>

Server Side Package

Server side package is a Broccoli.js plugin that concatinates all of the fixtures into a single file that you can consume in your browser app.

npm install --save-dev qd-ajax

In your Brocfile.js

var concatFixtures = require('qd-ajax');

// concatFixtures( inputTree, moduleName, outputFile )
return concatFixtures('fixtures', 'fixtures', '/fixtures.js');

API

This lib simply wraps jQuery.ajax with two exceptions:

  • success and error callbacks are not supported
  • does not resolve three arguments like $.ajax (real promises only resolve a single value). request only resolves the response data from the request, while raw resolves an object with the three "arguments" as keys if you need them.

Other than that, use request exactly like $.ajax.

var ajax = qd.ajax;

App.ApplicationRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
  model: function() {
    return ajax.request('/foo');
  }
}

// if you need access to the jqXHR or textStatus, use raw
ajax.raw('/foo').then(function(result) {
  // result.response
  // result.textStatus
  // result.jqXHR
});

Ember Data

By default, if Ember Data is on the page, qd-ajax will override the RESTAdapter's ajax method to use qd-ajax instead of jQuery's ajax.

To opt out of the behavior, you can set qd.ajax.request.OVERRIDE_REST_ADAPTER = false after loading qd-ajax.

Simplified Testing with Fixtures

Adding fixtures with defineFixture tells qd-ajax to resolve the promise with the fixture matching a url instead of making a request. This allows you to test your app without creating fake servers with sinon, etc.

Example:

qd.ajax.defineFixture('api/v1/courses', {
  response: [{name: 'basket weaving'}],
  jqXHR: {},
  textStatus: 'success'
});

qd.ajax.request('api/v1/courses').then(function(result) {
  deepEqual(result, qd.ajax.lookupFixture('api/v1/courses').response);
});

To test failure paths, set the textStatus to anything but success.

You can reset defined fixtures between tests with qd.ajax.resetFixtures().

module('testing calls', {
  setup: function() {
    qd.ajax.resetFixtures();
  }
});

By default, qd.ajax resolves responses synchronously. To simulate real world asynchronous requests, you can use the delay helper or activate default delay with qd.ajax.request.DELAY_RESPONSE=true. You can also set the default delay time with qd.ajax.request.DELAY_TIME=3000;;

Fixture Helpers

delay(payload, [time])

Delay helper returns promise that will resolve after period of time specified by time parameter. The time parameter is optional and defaults to 250ms.

qd.ajax.defineFixture('api/v1/courses', function(){
  return this.delay({
    response: [{name: 'basket weaving'}],
    jqXHR: {},
    textStatus: 'success'
  }, 300);
});

success(payload)

Return jQuery.ajax compatible success response.

qd.ajax.defineFixture('api/v1/courses', function() {
  return this.success([{name: 'basket weaving'}]);
});

error([textStatus], [errorThrown])

Return jQuery.ajax compatible error response.

qd.ajax.defineFixture('api/v1/courses', function() {
  return this.error();
});

Contributing

Install dependencies and run tests with the following:

npm install
npm test

For those of you with release privileges:

npm run-script release

Special Thanks

Forked from ic-ajax by Instructure. Original code inspired by discourse ajax.

License and Copyright

MIT Style license

(c) 2014 Quandl Inc.