I have a website that consists of one parent page. Using th开发者_运维百科e lightbox-style jQuery plugin colorbox I open other pages in iFrames that float on top of the parent page, overlay style.
In the javascript code on the iFrame pages I load JSON data from Facebook. Since the data loading from facebook takes time I want to store the data I've loaded in a variable that lives on the parent page.
Then each time I open a new iFrame in an overlay, I want to be able to check if the parent page variable is empty or not. If it's empty, I load the data from Facebook. If it's not empty, I get the data from the variable on the parent page.
The only reason I want to do this is increasing performance and avoiding unnecessary calls to the Facebook API.
How do I create a solution where a javascript in an iFrame can store and access data from a variable that lives on its parent page?
I don't have real code, but in pseudo code I'd like something like this:
function loadFacebookFriends() {
if(parentFriendsVariable is empty) {
Load friends from Facebook
}
else {
localFriendsVariable = parentFriendsVariable
}
}
The call to the Facebook API looks like this:
FB.api("/me/friends?fields=name,first_name,picture", function(friendsData) {
// When this callback is executed, the data I want is
// now in the object:
friendsData.data
});
On the parent page my javascript code is in a jQuery document ready tag.
Thanks in advance!
/Thomas Kahn
I have solved the problem. The real source of it was not accessing the variable, but an error in how and when I accessed the variables in my javascript. When I declared the variables outside of jQuery in the parent page, like this:
var friendsCache = new Object;
...it worked! In my IFrame page I can access the value like this:
var friends = window.parent.friendsCache;
So now I have a solution that looks something like this. When the user has logged in successfully with Facebook Connect, I call the function loadFriends:
function loadFriends() {
if (jQuery.isEmptyObject(friends)) {
FB.api("/me/friends?fields=name,first_name,picture", renderFriends);
}
else {
renderFriends();
}
}
function renderFriends(friendsData) {
if (friendsData != undefined) {
if (!(jQuery.isEmptyObject(friendsData))) {
friends = friendsData.data;
window.parent.friendsCache = friends;
}
}
// Do the stuff you want to do when the friends are loaded
}
As long as the parent page isn't reloaded, I don't need to load the list of Facebook friends from the Graph API. Instead I load them from my cache variable, which gives me a highly noticeable increase in performance.
Eventhough this description was a little broader in scope than my original question, I hope someone will find it useful.
/Thomas Kahn
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