How do you make javascript code execute *in order*

Okay, so I appreciate that Javascript is not C# or PHP, but I keep coming back to an issue in Javascript - not with JS itself but my use of it.

I have a function:

function updateStatuses(){

showLoader() //show the 'loader.gif' in the UI

updateStatus('cron1'); //performs an ajax request to get the status of something
updateStatus('cron2');
updateStatus('cron3');
updateStatus('cronEmail');
updateStatus('cronHourly');
updateStatus('cronDaily');

hideLoader(); //hide the 'loader.gif' in the UI

}

Thing is, owing to Javascript's burning desire to jump ahead in the code, the loader never appears because the 'hideLoader' function runs straight after.

How can I fix this? Or in other words, how can I make a javascript function execute in the order I write it on the page...


The problem occurs because AJAX is in its nature asynchronus. This means that the updateStatus() calls are indeed executed in order but returns immediatly and the JS interpreter reaches hideLoader() before any data is retreived from the AJAX requests.

You should perform the hideLoader() on an event where the AJAX calls are finished.


You need to think of JavaScript as event based rather than procedural if you're doing AJAX programming. You have to wait until the first call completes before executing the second. The way to do that is to bind the second call to a callback that fires when the first is finished. Without knowing more about the inner workings of your AJAX library (hopefully you're using a library) I can't tell you how to do this, but it will probably look something like this:

showLoader();

  updateStatus('cron1', function() {
    updateStatus('cron2', function() {
      updateStatus('cron3', function() {
        updateStatus('cronEmail', function() {
          updateStatus('cronHourly', function() {
            updateStatus('cronDaily', funciton() { hideLoader(); })
          })
        })
      })
    })
  })
});

The idea is, updateStatus takes its normal argument, plus a callback function to execute when it's finished. It's a reasonably common pattern to pass a function to run onComplete into a function which provides such a hook.

Update

If you're using jQuery, you can read up on $.ajax() here: http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax/

Your code probably looks something like this:

function updateStatus(arg) {
  // processing

  $.ajax({
     data : /* something */,
     url  : /* something */
  });

  // processing
}

You can modify your functions to take a callback as their second parameter with something like this:

function updateStatus(arg, onComplete) {
  $.ajax({
    data : /* something */,
    url  : /* something */,
    complete : onComplete // called when AJAX transaction finishes
  });

}


I thinks all you need to do is have this in your code:

async: false,

So your Ajax call would look like this:

jQuery.ajax({
            type: "GET",
            url: "something.html for example",
            dataType: "html",
            async: false,
            context: document.body,
            success: function(response){

                //do stuff here

            },
            error: function() {
                alert("Sorry, The requested property could not be found.");
            }  
        });

Obviously some of this need to change for XML, JSON etc but the async: false, is the main point here which tell the JS engine to wait until the success call have returned (or failed depending) and then carry on. Remember there is a downside to this, and thats that the entire page becomes unresponsive until the ajax returns!!! usually within milliseconds which is not a big deals but COULD take longer.

Hope this is the right answer and it helps you :)


We have something similar in one of our projects, and we solved it by using a counter. If you increase the counter for each call to updateStatus and decrease it in the AJAX request's response function (depends on the AJAX JavaScript library you're using.)

Once the counter reaches zero, all AJAX requests are completed and you can call hideLoader().

Here's a sample:

var loadCounter = 0;

function updateStatuses(){
    updateStatus('cron1'); //performs an ajax request to get the status of something
    updateStatus('cron2');
    updateStatus('cron3');    
    updateStatus('cronEmail');
    updateStatus('cronHourly');
    updateStatus('cronDaily');
}

function updateStatus(what) {
    loadCounter++;

    //perform your AJAX call and set the response method to updateStatusCompleted()
}

function updateStatusCompleted() {
    loadCounter--;
    if (loadCounter <= 0)
        hideLoader(); //hide the 'loader.gif' in the UI
}

This has nothing to do with the execution order of the code.

The reason that the loader image never shows, is that the UI doesn't update while your function is running. If you do changes in the UI, they don't appear until you exit the function and return control to the browser.

You can use a timeout after setting the image, giving the browser a chance to update the UI before starting rest of the code:

function updateStatuses(){

  showLoader() //show the 'loader.gif' in the UI

  // start a timeout that will start the rest of the code after the UI updates
  window.setTimeout(function(){
    updateStatus('cron1'); //performs an ajax request to get the status of something
    updateStatus('cron2');
    updateStatus('cron3');
    updateStatus('cronEmail');
    updateStatus('cronHourly');
    updateStatus('cronDaily');

    hideLoader(); //hide the 'loader.gif' in the UI
  },0);
}

There is another factor that also can make your code appear to execute out of order. If your AJAX requests are asynchronous, the function won't wait for the responses. The function that takes care of the response will run when the browser receives the response. If you want to hide the loader image after the response has been received, you would have to do that when the last response handler function runs. As the responses doesn't have to arrive in the order that you sent the requests, you would need to count how many responses you got to know when the last one comes.