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UncleCheese
20th May 2015

In this tutorial, we'll add some Ajax behaviour to our site and cover a key player in the SilverStripe Framework known as ViewableData.

Ajax Behaviour and ViewableData

Level: Beginner

Duration: 15:39

In this lesson:

What we'll cover

  • Writing the Javascript
  • An overview of ViewableData
  • Rendering a partial template
  • Adding some UX enhancements

Writing the Javascript

In the last tutorial, we added pagination to our list of search results. Let's now enhance the user experience a bit by adding Ajax to the pagination links.

Before we do anything, we'll need to add some JavaScript that will add this functionality. We'll do this in our catch-all JavaScript file, scripts.js.

themes/one-ring/js/scripts.js

// Pagination
if ($('.pagination').length) {
  $('.main').on('click','.pagination a', function (e) {
        e.preventDefault();
        var url = $(this).attr('href');
        $.ajax(url)
            .done(function (response) {
                $('.main').html(response);
            })
            .fail (function (xhr) {
                alert('Error: ' + xhr.responseText);
            });
    });
}

This is pretty specific to this use-case. Further down the track, we may find that we're adding a lot of Ajax events that closely resemble this, so we may want to make it more reusable at some point, but for now, let's just get this working.

Let's give this a try. Click on a link in the pagination and see if it works.

It kind of works, right? But we've still got a way to go. The controller is returning the entire page -- from <html> to </html> into our .main div. Not good, but it is the expected result. The Ajax URL is just the href attribute, so anything different would be unusual.

So what do we do? Change the URL in our Javascript to use something other than href? We could use an alternative URL in something like data-ajax-url. That's actually not necessary. We always aim to keep things tidy with single endpoints. The controller ideally know as little about the UI as possible, and setting up a separate endpoint for Ajax requests in this case would be antithetical to that. We'll keep the same endpoint, and we'll just assign the controller the ability to detect Ajax requests.

Detecting Ajax in a controller

Let's update PropertySearchPage.php to detect Ajax.

mysite/code/PropertySearchPage.php

public function index(SS_HTTPRequest $request) {

    //...

    if($request->isAjax()) {
        return "Ajax response!";
    }

    return array (
        'Results' => $paginatedProperties
    );
}

Now give the link a try, and see what we get. You should see your custom Ajax response. Now we just need to return some partial content. Before we do that, let's talk a bit about a key player in SilverStripe Framework called ViewableData.

An overview of ViewableData

To establish a basis for the next section of this lesson, we'll need to know more about how ViewableData objects work. ViewableData is a primitive class in SilverStripe that essentially allows its public properties and methods to render content to a template. The most common occurance of ViewableData objects is in DataObject instances, which we've been working with on templates exclusively. But templates are capable of rendering much more than database content. You just need to go further up the inheritance chain, above DataObject to ViewableData, or a subclass thereof.

Let's look at a simple example of ViewableData.

class Address extends ViewableData {

    public $Street = '123 Main Street';

    public $City = 'Compton';

    public $Zip = '90210';

    public $Country = 'US';

    public function Country() {
        return MyGeoLibrary::get_country_name($this->Country);
    }

    public function getFullAddress() {
        return sprintf(
            '%s<br>%s %s<br>%s'
            $this->Street,
            $this->City,
            $this->Zip,
            $this->Country() 
        );
    }
}

Now let's create a template to render our Address object.

AddressTemplate.ss

<p>I live on $Street in $City.</p>
<p>My full address is $FullAddress.</p>

As you can see, we're rendering data using a combination of both methods and properties. ViewableData has a very specific way of resolving the template variables on the object:

  • Check if there public method on the object called [VariableName]
  • If not, check if a method called "get[VariableName]" exists
  • If not, check if there is a public property named [VariableName]
  • Otherwise, call "getField([VariableName])"

getField() is a fallback method. For the base ViewableData class, it simply returns $this->$VariableName. The idea is that subclasses can invoke their own handlers for this. For example, in DataObject, getField() looks to the $db array.

All ViewableData objects know how to render themselves on templates. To do that, simply invoke renderWith($templateName) on the object, and the template variables will be scoped to that object.

$myViewableData = Address::create();
echo $myViewableData->renderWith('AddressTemplate');

Another really useful feature of ViewableData is that the object itself can be called on a template and render itself. If we were to simply call $MyAddressObject on a template, SilverStripe would attempt to invoke a method called forTemplate() on the object to render it as a string. In our example address object, that might look like this:

class Address extends ViewableData {

    //...   

    public function forTemplate() {
        return $this->getFullAddress();
    }
}

A great example of this is SilverStripe's Image class. When you call $MyImage on a template, it invokes its forTemplate() method, which returns a string of HTML representing an <img /> tag with all the correct attributes and values.

Rendering a partial template

So now that we have a good understanding of ViewableData, let's play around with some of its features. Right now, we're just returning a string to the template for our Ajax response. Let's instead return a partial template.

At the centre of dealing with Ajax responses is the use of includes in your Layout template. Let's take everything in the .main div, and export it to an include called PropertySearchResults.

themes/one-ring/templates/Includes/PropertySearchResults.ss

<!-- BEGIN MAIN CONTENT -->
<div class="main col-sm-8">
    <% include PropertySearchResults %>             
</div>  
<!-- END MAIN CONTENT -->

Reload the page with ?flush to get the new template.

Now, returning an Ajax response is trivial. Simply render the include.

class PropertySearchPage_Controller extends Page_Controller {

    public function index(SS_HTTPRequest $request) {

        //...

        if($request->isAjax()) {
            return $this->renderWith('PropertySearch');
        }

        //..
    }
}

Let's try it out. It's not quite working right. We're getting a "no results" message when we paginate. That's because the $Results variable is not exposed to the template through renderWith(). It's just a local variable in our index() method. We have two choices here:

  • Assign $paginatedProperties to a public property on the controller
  • Explicitly pass it to the template using customise().

Of these two options, the latter is much more favourable. There are cases where the first option makes more sense, but in this case, explicitly passing the list makes our PropertySearchResults template more reusable, and assigning a new member property would pollute our controller unnecessarily. Let's make that update now.

class PropertySearchPage_Controller extends Page_Controller {

    public function index(SS_HTTPRequest $request) {

        //...

        if($request->isAjax()) {
            return $this->customise(array
                'Results' => $paginatedResults
            ))->renderWith('PropertySearchResults');
        }

        return array (
            'Results' => $paginatedProperties
        );
    }
}

We now have repeated our array of data, so let's clean that up a bit.

class PropertySearchPage_Controller extends Page_Controller {

    public function index(SS_HTTPRequest $request) {

        //...

        $data = array (
            'Results' => $paginatedProperties
        );

        if($request->isAjax()) {
            return $this->customise($data)
                         ->renderWith('PropertySearchResults');
        }

        return $data;
    }
}

Try it now. It's looking much better!

Adding some UX enhancements

There are two major shortcomings of this user experience:

  • The scroll stays fixed to the bottom of the results, leaving the user with little indication that the content has been updated
  • The URL is not updated, so a page refresh after paginating will take the user back to the first page

Let's clean up both of these things now, with some updates to our Javascript.

themes/one-ring/js/scripts.js

// Pagination
if ($('.pagination').length) {
    var paginate = function (url) {
        $.ajax(url)
            .done(function (response) {
                $('.main').html(response);
                $('html, body').animate({
                    scrollTop: $('.main').offset().top
                });
                window.history.pushState(
                    {url: url},
                    document.title,
                    url
                );    
            })
            .fail(function (xhr) {
                alert('Error: ' + xhr.responseText);
            });

    }
    $('.main').on('click','.pagination a', function (e) {
        e.preventDefault();
        var url = $(this).attr('href');
        paginate(url);
    });

    window.onpopstate = function(e) {
        if (e.state.url) {
            paginate(e.state.url);
        }
        else {
            e.preventDefault();
        }
    };        
}

First, we'll add an animate() method that will handle the automatic scrolling. Then, we'll push some state to the browser history using pushState.

Lastly, we make export the .ajax() call to a function, so that both the pagination links and the browser back button will be able to invoke it when we add an onpopstate event.

One last thing...

After the publication of this tutorial, several users reported a bug with the way the Ajax history was working. To replicate it, let's just try paginating a few times, and clicking on a non-Ajax link that will take us to another page. Now click the back button. Yikes! We're only getting back the content for the Ajax request. You may not be able to replicate this in all browsers. Google Chrome seems to reliably reproduce the bug, though. So why is this happening?

The short answer is that good browsers like Google Chrome are really, really smart. That's what makes them so fast. In this case, perhaps it's being a bit too smart, but ultimately, we have made a pretty critical mistake.

Earlier in the tutorial, we talked about a common endpoint for standard HTTP requests and XHRs. While it's true that both types of requests should be piped through the same controller action, the idea that they should share exactly the same URL is flawed. One of the pillars of HTTP caching, and the HTTP protocol in general, is that a URL should only be considered unique. It should only point to one body of content. When URLs return various responses based on arbitrary external state like session state or, in our case, the type of request, bad things can happen, because the browser has cached that URL, believing that it has already seen the response that it generates. This is great for performance, but bad for the type of turnkey functionality we're trying to implement.

We need to update our Javascript so that the Ajax request has a slightly different URL than the URL that is being stored in history. Let's just append a simple ajax=1 request parameter to the URL.

    // Pagination
    if ($('.pagination').length) {
        var paginate = function (url) {
            var param = '&ajax=1',
                ajaxUrl = (url.indexOf(param) === -1) ? 
                           url + '&ajax=1' : 
                           url,
                cleanUrl = url.replace(new RegExp(param+'$'),'');

            $.ajax(ajaxUrl)
                .done(function (response) {
                    $('.main').html(response);
                    $('html, body').animate({
                        scrollTop: $('.main').offset().top
                    });
                    window.history.pushState(
                        {url: cleanUrl},
                        document.title,
                        cleanUrl
                    );
                })
                .fail (function (xhr) {
                    alert('Error: ' + xhr.responseText);
                });
        };

Let's walk through this.

  • First, we generate the ajaxUrl variable, is whatever URL the function is given, plus an ajax=1 parameter. Notice that we have to be careful not to add the ajax parameter multiple times. We have to do this because the pagination links preserve all the GET parameters from the Ajax request, so they will all contain query strings like ?start=10&ajax=1.
  • Next, we generate the cleanURL variable, which is the URL with the ajax=1 removed. Again, the pagination links all have ajax=1 on them, so this sanitisation is important.
  • We then update the Ajax request to go to the ajaxUrl instead of the given URL.
  • Lastly, we store the cleanUrl in the browser history, so that when the back button is pressed, the browser knows that the Ajax request and the standard request are different.

In order to test this, it is imperative that you clear your browser cache. This whole bug revolves around eager caching, so you won't see any results until you do so. If you're using Google Chrome, you may want to try Incognito Mode for this.

Now the back button is returning the expected result, and things are looking and feeling much better.

Keep learning!

Dealing with arbitrary template data

In this tutorial, we're going to talk about adding non-database content to our templates.

Creating Filtered Views

In this lesson we'll talk about filtering a list of items on a template through the navigation.

Beyond the ORM: Building custom SQL

In this tutorial, we'll build a date archive using custom SQL queries, and introduce the SQLQuery class.