So I need to make a a cross domain request where the response is not JSON formatted, so I cannot use .getJSON. .get obviously doesn't work because it is a cross domain request.
I came across this (Read this) when I was googling and it seems it should work for what I want to do (which is do a cross domain call that isn't json formatted using a jquery plug in). My code looks like the following. I know the url works fine because if I paste it into my browser, I can see the response, which according to last.fm documentation
The body of the server response consists of a series of \n (ASCII 10) terminated lines. A typical successful server response will be something like this:
OK
17E61E13454CDD8B68E8D7DEEEDF6170
http://post.audioscrobbler.com:80/np_1.2
http://post2.audioscrobbler.com:80/protocol_1.2
So I know my URL is fine. Now I am wondering how I get at this information, and why my version of their example does not work.
function performHandshake(sk, token, ts){
var token = md5(apiSecret + ts);
var urlToUse = "http://post.audioscrobbler.com/?hs=true&p=1.2.1&c=tst&v=1.0&u=chamals&t=" + ts + "&a=" + toke开发者_开发问答n + "&api_key=" + apiKey + "&sk=" + sk + "&format=xml&callback=cbfunc";
$('#container').load(urlToUse);
$.ajax({
url: urlToUse,
type: 'GET',
success: function(res){
var headline = $(res.responseText).find('a.tst').text();
window.console.log(headline);
}
});
}
Well the page you linked you talks about using YQL and jQuery. It's a very interesting solution. However, your example seems to skip over the YQL part (which is crucial).
var urlToUse = "http://post.audioscrobbler.com/?hs=true&p=1.2.1&c=tst&v=1.0&u=chamals&t=" + ts + "&a=" + token + "&api_key=" + apiKey + "&sk=" + sk + "&format=xml&callback=cbfunc";
var yqlUrl2Use = "http://query.yahooapis.com/v1/public/yql?"+
"q=select%20*%20from%20html%20where%20url%3D%22"+
encodeURIComponent(urlToUse)+
"%22&format=xml'&callback=?"
// this function gets the data from the successful
// JSON-P call
Then you'll have to call the call the new URL as a JSONP req...
$.getJSON(yqlUrl2Use, function(json){
// figure out the format of the answer here...
});
Yeah, cross browser scripting. You can't AJAX anything like that since it violates the same domain policy.
You are going to have to setup a proxy on the same server the JavaScript is running from.
Edit Lookslike you need the $('#container').load(url)
bit for that to work.
Go back an reread the linked article carefully.
You need to use $.getJSON
rather than $.ajax()
to return cross site information.
The var res actually has my information that I needed. I guess their headline = part was specifically for their implementation.
Thanks to those who helped!
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