Imagine you have a MVC controller exposing a Person as following:
public JsonResult GetPerson(int id)
{
return Json(new Person
{
First = "Barack",
Last = "Obama"
},JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);
}
Now I want to use this client side. I want to update my "first" span with the First property of the person I get back from the server. After messing around I came up with the following:
$(document).ready(function() {
$.getJSON("/Person/GetPerson/", { id: 4 }, function(data) {
$("#first").text(data.First);
});
});
This took me five minutes to get right (which JQuery method? -> Google, how to pass data? -> find example, plus a typo in the first/First member). Five minutes of stupid getting right what should be trivial. Why not let the compiler help? So using Weld I change my server side method to this :
[AjaxMethod]
public JsonResult<Person> GetPerson(int id)
{
return new JsonResult<Person>(Json(new Person
{
First = "Barack",
Last = "Obama"
}, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet)); ;
}
Basically I wrap my JsonResult in a generic wrapper JSonResult<T> (included with Weld) so that Weld knows what type to expect. Next I add the AjaxMethod Weld attribute. Client side I use TypeScript and use the generated proxy class.
/// <reference path="Weld/PersonController.ts" />/// <reference path="typings/jquery/jquery.d.ts" />
$(document).ready(function () {
PersonController.prototype.GetPerson(2, (person) => {
$("#first").text(person.First)
});
});
Now person is a JavaScript object or a TypeScript 'any' type. No, Person is a fully defined TypeScript interface with a First and Last member just like my C# class. Here's the generated code:
/// <reference path="../typings/jquery/jquery.d.ts" />
class PersonController
{
GetPerson(id: number, callback: (data: Person) => any)
{
var url = "/Person/GetPerson";var data = { id: id };
$.ajax({
url: url,
type : "POST",
data: data,
success: callback,
});
}
}
interface Person
{
First: string;
Last: string;
}
As always in the end there is still JavaScript code generated which you can easily debug. Weld code is simple and clean. Easy huh? And there are more benefits:
- If I remove or rename my action-method the TypeScript compiler will detect my breaking client side code at compile time. If you just use javascript you will (hopefully) find out at runtime.
- If I add or remove properties from my Person class my changes will cascade to the clientside immediately.
- I get a nice interface clientside making code completion really work
- No more Googling JQuery methods
- This is more DRY (Don't Repeat Yourself). For example if you don't like JQuery you can build a Weld template using a different method. Regenate and you are ready