tags:

views:

96

answers:

4

How do I make a function wait until all jquery ajax requests are done inside another function?

In short, I need to wait for all ajax requests to be done before i execute the next. But how?

A: 

You could probably get by with a simple counting semaphore, although how you implement it would be dependent on your code. A simple example would be something like...

var semaphore  = 0,     // counting semaphore for ajax requests
    all_queued = false; // bool indicator to account for instances where the first request might finish before the second even starts

semaphore++;
$.get('ajax/test1.html', function(data) {
    semaphore--;
    if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) {
        // process your custom stuff here
    }
});

semaphore++;
$.get('ajax/test2.html', function(data) {
    semaphore--;
    if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) {
        // process your custom stuff here
    }
});

semaphore++;
$.get('ajax/test3.html', function(data) {
    semaphore--;
    if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) {
        // process your custom stuff here
    }
});

semaphore++;
$.get('ajax/test4.html', function(data) {
    semaphore--;
    if (all_queued && semaphore === 0) {
        // process your custom stuff here
    }
});

// now that all ajax requests are queued up, switch the bool to indicate it
all_queued = true;

If you wanted this to operate like {async: false} but you didn't want to lock the browser, you could accomplish the same thing with a jQuery queue.

var $queue = $("<div/>");
$queue.queue(function(){
    $.get('ajax/test1.html', function(data) {
        $queue.dequeue();
    });
}).queue(function(){
    $.get('ajax/test2.html', function(data) {
        $queue.dequeue();
    });
}).queue(function(){
    $.get('ajax/test3.html', function(data) {
        $queue.dequeue();
    });
}).queue(function(){
    $.get('ajax/test4.html', function(data) {
        $queue.dequeue();
    });
});
BBonifield
This seems like it would overly complicate a trivial problem.
Chris
It's really not all that complicated. Counting semaphores are a common mechanism in CS. If you prefer though, the example using jQuery queues would work as well without having to implement the semaphore yourself.
BBonifield
+3  A: 

jQuery allows you to specify if you want the ajax request to be asynchronous or not. You can simply make the ajax requests synchronous and then the rest of the code won't execute until they return.

For example:

jQuery.ajax({ async: false,....});

shmuel613
One thing to note is that using { async: false } can temporarily lock the browser. http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax/
BBonifield
Exactly! This way you know that at the end of the function which calls all the ajax requests, that they are all finished executing.
shmuel613
A: 

javascript is event-based, so you should never wait, rather set hooks/callbacks

You can probably just use the success/complete methods of jquery.ajax

Or you could use .ajaxComplete :

$('.log').ajaxComplete(function(e, xhr, settings) {
  if (settings.url == 'ajax/test.html') {
    $(this).text('Triggered ajaxComplete handler.');
    //and you can do whatever other processing here, including calling another function...
  }
});

though youy should post a pseudocode of how your(s) ajax request(s) is(are) called to be more precise...

Stefano
A: 

I found a good answer my self which is exactly what I was looking for :)

jQuery ajaxQueue

//This handles the queues    
(function($) {

  var ajaxQueue = $({});

  $.ajaxQueue = function(ajaxOpts) {

    var oldComplete = ajaxOpts.complete;

    ajaxQueue.queue(function(next) {

      ajaxOpts.complete = function() {
        if (oldComplete) oldComplete.apply(this, arguments);

        next();
      };

      $.ajax(ajaxOpts);
    });
  };

})(jQuery);

Then you can add a ajax request to the queue like this:

$.ajaxQueue({
        url: 'page.php',
        data: {id: 1},
        type: 'POST',
        success: function(data) {
            $('#status').html(data);
        }
    });
jamietelin