$.ajax(
{
url : "http://search.twitter.com/search.json?q=google&lang=en&rpp=10&since_id=&callback=?",
dataType : 'json',开发者_开发技巧
success : function(data)
{
alert(data.results.length);
}
});
How exactly is this working ? I mean the cross-domain request.
jQuery detects the callback=?
part of your URL and automatically switches the dataType from 'json'
to 'jsonp'
.
JSONP is a JSON query that is not made using XMLHttpRequest but by adding a script tag to your page. Calling back into your script is handled by the caller giving the name of a JavaScript function to execute when the script loads. This is why cross-domain is working.
jQuery will handle JSONP transparently for you in a $.ajax request. The manual (and to me cleaner) way to do this is to define a 'jsonp'
dataType and use the placeholder ?
for the callback name in the URL. jQuery will automatically replace the ?
with an appropriate value to trigger your success callback.
$.ajax(
{
url : "http://api.twitter.com/1/users/show/google.json&jsoncallback=?",
dataType : 'jsonp',
success : function(data)
{
alert(data.results.length);
}
});
jQuery defines your callback function in the global scope, then substitutes callback=?
in the URL with callback=nameItGaveTheFunction
.
It then functions as a normal JSONP request; using script tags, and wrapping the response in the callback function.
I believe that jQuery realises it's cross domain and so adds a script tag to the page header with the appropriate src attribute (rather than firing of an ajax request). This loads the JSON and then fires the callback.
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