X-Git-Url: http://git.ithinksw.org/extjs.git/blobdiff_plain/6e39d509471fe9b4e2660e0d1631b350d0c66f40..7a654f8d43fdb43d78b63d90528bed6e86b608cc:/docs/source/Json.html diff --git a/docs/source/Json.html b/docs/source/Json.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..e7323f6d --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/source/Json.html @@ -0,0 +1,292 @@ +
\ No newline at end of file/** + * @author Ed Spencer + * @class Ext.data.reader.Json + * @extends Ext.data.reader.Reader + * + * <p>The JSON Reader is used by a Proxy to read a server response that is sent back in JSON format. This usually + * happens as a result of loading a Store - for example we might create something like this:</p> + * +<pre><code> +Ext.define('User', { + extend: 'Ext.data.Model', + fields: ['id', 'name', 'email'] +}); + +var store = new Ext.data.Store({ + model: 'User', + proxy: { + type: 'ajax', + url : 'users.json', + reader: { + type: 'json' + } + } +}); +</code></pre> + * + * <p>The example above creates a 'User' model. Models are explained in the {@link Ext.data.Model Model} docs if you're + * not already familiar with them.</p> + * + * <p>We created the simplest type of JSON Reader possible by simply telling our {@link Ext.data.Store Store}'s + * {@link Ext.data.proxy.Proxy Proxy} that we want a JSON Reader. The Store automatically passes the configured model to the + * Store, so it is as if we passed this instead: + * +<pre><code> +reader: { + type : 'json', + model: 'User' +} +</code></pre> + * + * <p>The reader we set up is ready to read data from our server - at the moment it will accept a response like this:</p> + * +<pre><code> +[ + { + "id": 1, + "name": "Ed Spencer", + "email": "ed@sencha.com" + }, + { + "id": 2, + "name": "Abe Elias", + "email": "abe@sencha.com" + } +] +</code></pre> + * + * <p><u>Reading other JSON formats</u></p> + * + * <p>If you already have your JSON format defined and it doesn't look quite like what we have above, you can usually + * pass JsonReader a couple of configuration options to make it parse your format. For example, we can use the + * {@link #root} configuration to parse data that comes back like this:</p> + * +<pre><code> +{ + "users": [ + { + "id": 1, + "name": "Ed Spencer", + "email": "ed@sencha.com" + }, + { + "id": 2, + "name": "Abe Elias", + "email": "abe@sencha.com" + } + ] +} +</code></pre> + * + * <p>To parse this we just pass in a {@link #root} configuration that matches the 'users' above:</p> + * +<pre><code> +reader: { + type: 'json', + root: 'users' +} +</code></pre> + * + * <p>Sometimes the JSON structure is even more complicated. Document databases like CouchDB often provide metadata + * around each record inside a nested structure like this:</p> + * +<pre><code> +{ + "total": 122, + "offset": 0, + "users": [ + { + "id": "ed-spencer-1", + "value": 1, + "user": { + "id": 1, + "name": "Ed Spencer", + "email": "ed@sencha.com" + } + } + ] +} +</code></pre> + * + * <p>In the case above the record data is nested an additional level inside the "users" array as each "user" item has + * additional metadata surrounding it ('id' and 'value' in this case). To parse data out of each "user" item in the + * JSON above we need to specify the {@link #record} configuration like this:</p> + * +<pre><code> +reader: { + type : 'json', + root : 'users', + record: 'user' +} +</code></pre> + * + * <p><u>Response metadata</u></p> + * + * <p>The server can return additional data in its response, such as the {@link #totalProperty total number of records} + * and the {@link #successProperty success status of the response}. These are typically included in the JSON response + * like this:</p> + * +<pre><code> +{ + "total": 100, + "success": true, + "users": [ + { + "id": 1, + "name": "Ed Spencer", + "email": "ed@sencha.com" + } + ] +} +</code></pre> + * + * <p>If these properties are present in the JSON response they can be parsed out by the JsonReader and used by the + * Store that loaded it. We can set up the names of these properties by specifying a final pair of configuration + * options:</p> + * +<pre><code> +reader: { + type : 'json', + root : 'users', + totalProperty : 'total', + successProperty: 'success' +} +</code></pre> + * + * <p>These final options are not necessary to make the Reader work, but can be useful when the server needs to report + * an error or if it needs to indicate that there is a lot of data available of which only a subset is currently being + * returned.</p> + */ +Ext.define('Ext.data.reader.Json', { + extend: 'Ext.data.reader.Reader', + alternateClassName: 'Ext.data.JsonReader', + alias : 'reader.json', + + root: '', + + /** + * @cfg {String} record The optional location within the JSON response that the record data itself can be found at. + * See the JsonReader intro docs for more details. This is not often needed and defaults to undefined. + */ + + /** + * @cfg {Boolean} useSimpleAccessors True to ensure that field names/mappings are treated as literals when + * reading values. Defalts to <tt>false</tt>. + * For example, by default, using the mapping "foo.bar.baz" will try and read a property foo from the root, then a property bar + * from foo, then a property baz from bar. Setting the simple accessors to true will read the property with the name + * "foo.bar.baz" direct from the root object. + */ + useSimpleAccessors: false, + + /** + * Reads a JSON object and returns a ResultSet. Uses the internal getTotal and getSuccess extractors to + * retrieve meta data from the response, and extractData to turn the JSON data into model instances. + * @param {Object} data The raw JSON data + * @return {Ext.data.ResultSet} A ResultSet containing model instances and meta data about the results + */ + readRecords: function(data) { + //this has to be before the call to super because we use the meta data in the superclass readRecords + if (data.metaData) { + this.onMetaChange(data.metaData); + } + + /** + * DEPRECATED - will be removed in Ext JS 5.0. This is just a copy of this.rawData - use that instead + * @property jsonData + * @type Mixed + */ + this.jsonData = data; + return this.callParent([data]); + }, + + //inherit docs + getResponseData: function(response) { + try { + var data = Ext.decode(response.responseText); + } + catch (ex) { + Ext.Error.raise({ + response: response, + json: response.responseText, + parseError: ex, + msg: 'Unable to parse the JSON returned by the server: ' + ex.toString() + }); + } + //<debug> + if (!data) { + Ext.Error.raise('JSON object not found'); + } + //</debug> + + return data; + }, + + //inherit docs + buildExtractors : function() { + var me = this; + + me.callParent(arguments); + + if (me.root) { + me.getRoot = me.createAccessor(me.root); + } else { + me.getRoot = function(root) { + return root; + }; + } + }, + + /** + * @private + * We're just preparing the data for the superclass by pulling out the record objects we want. If a {@link #record} + * was specified we have to pull those out of the larger JSON object, which is most of what this function is doing + * @param {Object} root The JSON root node + * @return {Array} The records + */ + extractData: function(root) { + var recordName = this.record, + data = [], + length, i; + + if (recordName) { + length = root.length; + + for (i = 0; i < length; i++) { + data[i] = root[i][recordName]; + } + } else { + data = root; + } + return this.callParent([data]); + }, + + /** + * @private + * Returns an accessor function for the given property string. Gives support for properties such as the following: + * 'someProperty' + * 'some.property' + * 'some["property"]' + * This is used by buildExtractors to create optimized extractor functions when casting raw data into model instances. + */ + createAccessor: function() { + var re = /[\[\.]/; + + return function(expr) { + if (Ext.isEmpty(expr)) { + return Ext.emptyFn; + } + if (Ext.isFunction(expr)) { + return expr; + } + if (this.useSimpleAccessors !== true) { + var i = String(expr).search(re); + if (i >= 0) { + return Ext.functionFactory('obj', 'return obj' + (i > 0 ? '.' : '') + expr); + } + } + return function(obj) { + return obj[expr]; + }; + }; + }() +});