I'm using XMLHttpRequest
in JavaScript. However, it gives me an error, and I don't know what my problem is.
I have to parse an XML file and assign its contents to the webpage - here's my code:
<script = "text/javascript">
window.onload = onPageLoad();
var questionNum = 0;
function onPageLoad(questionNum) {
var xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xmlhttp.open("GET","quiz.xml");
try {
xmlhttp.send(null); // Here a xmlhttprequestexception number 101 is thrown
} catch(err) {
document.getElementById("body").innerHTML += "\nXMLHttprequest error: " + err.description; // This prints "XMLHttprequest error: undefined" in the body.
}
xmlDoc = xmlhttp.responseXML;
parser = new DOMParser(); // This code is untested as it does not run this far.
}
</script>
My XML file is inside the same directory.
<question>
<query>what is 2+2?</query>
<option>4</option>
<option>5</option>
<option>3</option>
<answer>4</answer>
</question>
Just for reference, I typically program in C# or Java, and I'm running my website on Google Chrome.
So there might be a few things wrong here.
First start by reading how to use XMLHttpRequest.open()
because there's a third optional parameter for specifying whether to make an asynchronous request, defaulting to true. That means you're making an asynchronous request and need to specify a callback function before you do the send()
. Here's an example from MDN:
var oXHR = new XMLHttpRequest();
oXHR.open("GET", "http://www.mozilla.org/", true);
oXHR.onreadystatechange = function (oEvent) {
if (oXHR.readyState === 4) {
if (oXHR.status === 200) {
console.log(oXHR.responseText)
} else {
console.log("Error", oXHR.statusText);
}
}
};
oXHR.send(null);
Second, since you're getting a 101 error, you might use the wrong URL. So make sure that the URL you're making the request with is correct. Also, make sure that your server is capable of serving your quiz.xml
file.
You'll probably have to debug by simplifying/narrowing down where the problem is. So I'd start by making an easy synchronous request so you don't have to worry about the callback function. So here's another example from MDN for making a synchronous request:
var request = new XMLHttpRequest();
request.open('GET', 'file:///home/user/file.json', false);
request.send(null);
if (request.status == 0)
console.log(request.responseText);
Also, if you're just starting out with Javascript, you could refer to MDN for Javascript API documentation/examples/tutorials.