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Creating Rich Client Web Applications with AJAX

Creating Rich Client Web Applications with AJAX. Jason Beres jasonb@infragistics.com. Agenda. Web Apps: Whats good, whats not What is AJAX and how can AJAX help with the bad? Creating simple AJAX applications AJAX endpoints and payloads Using third-party AJAX libraries AJAX security

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Creating Rich Client Web Applications with AJAX

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  1. Creating Rich Client Web Applications with AJAX Jason Beres jasonb@infragistics.com

  2. Agenda • Web Apps: Whats good, whats not • What is AJAX and how can AJAX help with the bad? • Creating simple AJAX applications • AJAX endpoints and payloads • Using third-party AJAX libraries • AJAX security • ASP.NET 2.0 client callbacks and Atlas

  3. The Good, Bad and Ugly(of Web Applications) Condensed Version • The Good • Centralized control of the application • Easy deployment • The Bad • Locked into the browser sandbox • Loose the “thick-client” experience • One way to get data – the browser postback • The Ugly • Browser compatibility

  4. How does AJAX help? • Keep all of the good of thin client • Bring the “thick-client” experience much closer to the thin client • Escape the standard client/server HTTP request communications paradigm (the “postback”)

  5. What the heck is AJAX? • Asynchronous JavaScript And XML • No new technologies here, just a new name • Takes advantage of modern uplevel browser features: • A client side XML parser(on Windows this is generally the Microsoft XML parser) • Send data to/receive data from the server outside of the browsers standard communications mechanism (eg the postback) • Parse and enumerate XML formatted data on the client • A rich Document Object Model (DOM) • Powerful interaction points between the different elements of your webpage, the browser and browser plugins

  6. HTTP Request HTTP Response The standard web client/server request processing model GET / HTTP/1.1 Accept: image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, image/pjpeg, application/x-shockwave-flash, application/vnd.ms-excel, application/vnd.ms-powerpoint, application/msword, */* Accept-Language: en-us Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate User-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727) Host: www.microsoft.com Proxy-Connection: Keep-Alive Cookie: MC1=GUID=5cd2d5ca1a1cc54183c10f4bacaa45fa&HASH=cad5&LV=20059&V=3; A=I&I=AxUFAAAAAABuCAAAzJInmvNBZzRHm8aAr99x0A!!; msresearch=1 HTTP/1.1 200 OK Date: Fri, 04 Nov 2005 17:17:37 GMT Server: Microsoft-IIS/6.0 P3P: CP="ALL IND DSP COR ADM CONo CUR CUSo IVAo IVDo PSA PSD TAI TELo OUR SAMo CNT COM INT NAV ONL PHY PRE PUR UNI" X-Powered-By: ASP.NET X-AspNet-Version: 2.0.50727 Cache-Control: private Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8 Content-Length: 22370 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" > <html dir="ltr" lang="en"> <head> <META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" > <!--TOOLBAR_EXEMPT--> <meta http-equiv="PICS-Label" content="(PICS-1.1 &quot;http://www.rsac.org/ratingsv01.html&quot; l gen true r (n 0 s 0 v 0 l 0))" > <meta name="KEYWORDS" content="products; headlines; downloads; news; Web site; what's new; solutions; services; software; contests; corporate news;" > <meta name="DESCRIPTION" content="The entry page to Microsoft's Web site. Find software, solutions, answers, support, and Microsoft news." > <meta name="MS.LOCALE" content="EN-US" > <meta name="CATEGORY" content="home page" > <title>Microsoft Corporation</title> <base href="http://g.msn.com/mh_mshp/98765" > <style type="text/css" media="all"> Browser makes a resource request to the server Server processes the request and returns a result to the browser

  7. Demo • A simple HTML postback example

  8. Problems with this model • To get any data requires complete round trip to the server which is inefficient • UI suffers because the entire UI must be refreshed as part of the postback, even if it does not change (users see the page “flash”) • User is blocked from continuing to work until the page is returned from the postback

  9. HTTP Request Using XMLHTTP object, an asyncHTTP request is made to the server JavaScript callback function handles XMLHTTP response HTTP Response The client/server request processing model using AJAX GET /AjaxPresentation/AjaxWithHandler/SimpleAjax.ashx?DataRequest=true&val1=2&val2=2 HTTP/1.1 Accept: */* Accept-Language: en-us Referer: http://localhost/AjaxPresentation/AjaxWithHandler/SimpleAjax.aspx Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate User-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727) Host: localhost Proxy-Connection: Keep-Alive Cookie: .ASPXANONYMOUS=AcYSqWXDsOAzMTgxM2IwZi04YzdiLTQyMWMtYjJiNi0yYWVmNDA5OGY0Njg1; ASP.NET_SessionId=rq0avnqjfi5eer45zeq0qdj1 Browser makes a resource request tothe server HTTP/1.1 200 OK Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.1 Date: Fri, 04 Nov 2005 17:33:53 GMT X-Powered-By: ASP.NET X-AspNet-Version: 1.1.4322 Cache-Control: private Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8 Content-Length: 1 4 Server processes the request and returns a result to the browser

  10. AJAX Advantages • Send an receive only the data you need • Think chatty, not chunky • Only update portions of the page that need to be updated • Asynchronous, so users can continue to work while the page is updated, and more data is fetched

  11. Creating Ajax applications • Use JavaScript to instantiate the XML parser • Use the XML object to create a new HTTP request to the server: • Use the XML objects onreadystatechange property to assign a client-side callback method //Works in Mozilla (Firefox) and Safari var oXml = new XMLHttpRequest(); Works in Internet Explorer var oXml = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP"); oXml.Open("GET", “Endpoint.aspx”, true);

  12. Demo • A simple AJAX demo

  13. Side note: Debugging Client Script via Internet Explorer • Enable script debugging • Display script error notifications • Add the “debugger” command to your script • Mozilla supports debugging via Venkman debugger add-in

  14. AJAX Endpoints • Anything that can be accessed via HTTP can serve as an AJAX endpoint • Standard ASP.NET webpages (*.aspx) • HTTP Handlers (*.ashx, or custom extenstions) • Web Services (*.asmx) • PHP Web Pages • Think about endpoint performance • ASPX endpoints require a complete page lifecycle to execute on each request • Handlers and Web Services are much more lightweight • Both can access Session, Cache etc

  15. Demo • Using Handlers as AJAX endpoints • Accessing Session from an Handler

  16. Controlling Asynchronous Communications • Create timer based operations using JavaScripts setInterval command • Make sure you control the number of open HTTP connections, as well as the polling interval

  17. Demo • Adding AJAX Asynchronous polling

  18. AJAX Payloads • The AJAX “Payload” is the data returned by the HTTP request. • Since Ajax is simply a standard HTTP request/response, the response payload can be anything you like • Examples: • XML, HTML, Simple Types (number, string), JSON • Remember that the actual HTTP payload will always be a type of string, so objects must be serialized

  19. Primary Payload Types • Two primary types of payloads in AJAX: • XML • Simple, easy to read format, but you generally must use the MS XML Parser and DOM to work with it • Native to .NET – easy to create on and transport from the server • JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) • Slightly more complex • Data must be massaged into JSON format • Easier to work with once its on the client • Either supports complex object serialization

  20. Using XML Payloads • Use the XML DOM to examine and manipulate XML data on the client • ResponseXml property automatically provides a representation of data as parsed by the MSXML XMLDOM parser • XMLDOM provides complete XML navigation concepts: Document, Element, Node • Use client side XSLT to transform or format data • ParseError object tells you if the returned XML was badly formed //Works in Mozilla (Firefox) and Safari var oXsl = new XSLTProcessor(); //Works in Internet Explorer var oXsl = new ActiveXObject("MSXML2.DOMDocument");

  21. Demo • Parsing AJAX XML payloads • Using XSLT with AJAX Payloads

  22. JSON • JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a lightweight data-interchange format. • It is easy for humans to read and write. • It is easy for machines to parse and generate. • Useful as a data-interchange because it can be trivially parsed by JavaScript's built in eval() procedure. var json_data; json_data = "\"The quick brown fox.\""; myObject = eval("return " + json_data);

  23. Examples of JSON • Object serialized to JSON example • The same text expressed as XML: {"menu": { "id": "file", "value": "File", "popup": { "menuitem": [ {"value": "New", "onclick": "CreateNewDoc()"}, {"value": "Open", "onclick": "OpenDoc()"}, {"value": "Close", "onclick": "CloseDoc()"} ] } }} <menu id="file" value="File"> <popup> <menuitem value="New" onclick="CreateNewDoc()" /> <menuitem value="Open" onclick="OpenDoc()" /> <menuitem value="Close" onclick="CloseDoc()" /> </popup> </menu>

  24. Other AJAX libraries • Server Side Libraries • Ajax.NEThttp://ajax.schwarz-interactive.de/csharpsample/default.aspx • PHP & ASPhttp://cpaint.sourceforge.net/ • Client Side Libraries • Google AJAXSLThttp://goog-ajaxslt.sourceforge.net/ • Dojohttp://dojotoolkit.org/

  25. Ajax.NET • Open Source AJAX implementation for .NET(Note: while still available, the project is not longer being actively developed) • Easy to use. Requires a simple method attribute ( [AjaxMethod()]) to expose server side methods as AJAX endpoints • Automatically uses JSON to transport complex objects like DataSets • Uses dynamically generated JavaScript to create client side proxies for server side objects • Supports transport of integers, strings, doubles, booleans, DateTime, DataSets, DataTables and primitive types of custom classes and arrays • Other types supported via Custom Type converters

  26. Demo • Using Ajax.NET

  27. AJAX Security • HTTPS is your friend • Keep sensitive code or data on the server where you can control it • By default everything is sent clear text over the wire (including client side code), and could potentially be captured in transit and modified • JavaScript has no intrinsic over-the-wire encryption support, but you can implement your own encryption (search Google for ‘AJAX encryption’)

  28. Client Callbacks • New Feature in ASP.NET 2.0 • Add client-side callbacks to your web pages or server controls • Executes in the context of the current page • Allows you to access existing control state on the server during the callback process • Keeps you from having to pass as much data back • Not as flexible in setting endpoints, and passing arguments

  29. Atlas • Microsofts next generation AJAX framework • Cross browser compatible • Includes both declarative and imperative programming models • Code in vanilla JavaScript, or use the Atlas “tag” programming model • Attempts to bring JavaScript to a first class language • Uses abstraction layers to add familiar programming constructs like Types, Enumerations, Class Inheritance • Also uses abstraction layers to abstract cross browser problems • Includes a number of controls for common functionality

  30. Declarative Atlas <page xmlns:script="http://schemas.microsoft.com/xml-script/2005" xmlns:wiki="wiki"> <components> <label targetElement="loadingMsg1"> <bindings> <binding dataContext="documentsSource1" dataPath="isReady" property="visible" transform="Invert"/> </bindings> </label> <textBox targetElement="<%= navCategoryID.ClientID %>" /> <textBox targetElement="<%= navDefaultDocumentTitle.ClientID %>"/> <textBox targetElement="recurseSubfolders1"/> <dataSource id="documentsSource1" serviceURL="<%= ResolveUrl("~/WebServices/DocumentWebService.asmx") %>"> <bindings> <binding dataContext="<%= navCategoryID.ClientID %>" dataPath="text" property="selectParameters" propertyKey="categoryID"/> <binding dataContext="<%= navDefaultDocumentTitle.ClientID %>" dataPath="text" property="selectParameters“ propertyKey="defaultDocumentTitle"/> <binding dataContext="recurseSubfolders1" dataPath="text" property="selectParameters" propertyKey="strRecurseSubfolders"/> </bindings> </dataSource>

  31. Final thoughts • AJAX is not a magic bullet – use where appropriate • Too much HTTP chatter can be just as bad • AJAX throws a wrench in some existing browser features: • Bookmarking • The ‘Back’ button • AJAX is potentially a big gun, be careful

  32. Resources • Fiddler HTTP Sniffer • www.fiddlertool.com/fiddler/ • DOM Reference • msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/library/en-us/xmlsdk/html/d051f7c5-e882-42e8-a5b6-d1ce67af275c.asp • Ajax.NET • http://ajax.schwarz-interactive.de/csharpsample/default.aspx • Atlas • atlas.asp.net • JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) • www.json.org

  33. Questions? jasonb@infragistics.com

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