I attended a terrific meeting tonight of GANG, the Great Lakes Area .Net user Group, based in the Detroit-area. The main presenter was Jason Beres who gave an excellent presentation on ASP.Net tricks, many of them utilizing Javascript. One of my favorites came up in discussion and I agreed to post the code snippet here.
I have used this techniqe mainly on classic ASP pages as a way to populate secondary dropdown lists before ASP.Net and control-based postbacks came along. It still works with ASP.Net… BUT…the secondary listbox is not in the Viewstate so it’s value isn’t set properly when accessing the control in server code on the postback where you handle the data. The secondary list’s selected value is still in the Request.Form collection though. It is still a great technique to use to fetch data from the server without reloading the page.
The technique is IE-only as it uses an ActiveX object (XMLHTTP) in the Javascript. It also uses the XML DOM to parse the response from the server. In this example the server is an ASP page, but it could easily be a web service as well with the addition of one a little more code. This code is related to a previous post where I used VBA to enable Excel to be a web service client.
Here is the Javascript function:
/* Purpose: Fill secondary list boxes with content
Arguments: oItem - the primary dropdownlist object
sFieldName - The name of the field filling the secondary list
oDestination - the secondary list object
Returns: None, fills list box using MSXML*/
function fillSecondary(oItem, sFieldName, oDestination)
{
var nValue = oItem[oItem.selectedIndex].value;
var xmlHTTP = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP");
xmlHTTP.open("POST", "./listboxesXML.asp", false);
xmlHTTP.send('
var xmlDOM = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLDOM");
xmlDOM.loadXML(xmlHTTP.ResponseText);
if (xmlDOM.parseError != 0)
{
alert("Error occurred: " + xmlDOM.parseError.reason);
return false;
}
var oNode = xmlDOM.documentElement.firstChild;
var n=0;
if(oNode != null)
{
//Clear out the secondary list box, it might already have items
oDestination.length = 0;
while (oNode != null)
{
oDestination[n] = new Option(oNode.text, oNode.attributes(0).text);
n++;
oNode = oNode.nextSibling;
}
if(n==1)
oDestination.selectedIndex = 0;
}
}
In the HTML on the page, add an OnChange handler to the primary dropdown list to call the Javascript when the user changes the value:
<FORM id=“Form1“> <SELECT id=“Primary“ onchange=“fillSecondary(this, “Primary“, document.form1.secondary)“><OPTION value=“1“ selected>A list Item</OPTION></SELECT> <SELECT id=“Secondary“ name=“Secondary“></SELECT> </FORM>
The classic ASP page (listboxesXML.asp) called by the Javascript looks like this:
Dim xmlDOM 'XML DOM object
Dim oRS 'Recordset for child records
Dim sXML 'XML String returned to browser
Dim oNode 'DOM node containing data for searching
Dim sType 'The type/name of the unknown child node
set xmlDOM = Server.CreateObject("MSXML2.DOMDocument")
xmlDOM.async = false
xmlDOM.Load Request
xmlDOM.setProperty "SelectionLanguage", "XPath"
if xmlDOM.parseError = 0 then
'Select the request node
set oParent = xmlDOM.selectSingleNode("request")
'Get the child of the request node
set oNode = oParent.firstChild
'Store the child's value
sSearchValue = oNode.Text
'Store the child's name
sType = oNode.nodeName
set oRS = Server.CreateObject("ADODB.recordset")
'Fetch the appropriate data into the recordset using sType to tell which
' secondary list we should be fetching, in this case it is called “secondarytype“
'ADO Code should be here, removed for brevity
if not oRS.EOF then
'Build a response XML string
sXML = "
while not oRS.EOF
sXML = sXML & "<" & sType & " id=""" & oRS.Fields(0).Value & """>"
sXML = sXML & Server.HTMLEncode(ors.Fields(1).Value) & " oRS.MoveNext
wend
sXML = sXML & "
oRS.Close
else
sXML = "
sXML = sXML & "<" & sType & " id=""0"">"
sXML = sXML & "None listed sXML = sXML & "
oRS.Close
end if
set oRS = nothing
Response.Write sXML
else
Err.Raise 1, "ParseError", "There was a parse error in the request."
end if
This can be very tricky to debug if you have any problems. Try looking at the xmlHTTP.ResponseText in an alert in the Javascript function to see any 500 errors generated by the server.