Wordpress AJAX How to Implement Server Side Response












0















I'm attempting to implement an AJAX request and response all within one wordpress page. My request is getting a response containing the page's html contents, and not the data that my response function is supposed to output. Do I need to enqueue the response script from a separate file?



b.on("click", function(){

var data =
data = retrieve_hst()
console.log(data)

jQuery.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php",
data: { action: "recordData", hst_data: data }
}).done(function(response) {
alert (response);
});

<?php

add_action('wp_ajax_recordData', 'recordData' );
add_action('wp_ajax_nopriv_wps_recordData', 'recordData' );
function recordData() {

$data = $_POST['hst_data'];
echo $data;
die();
}
?>
})









share|improve this question























  • Where is that PHP code located? It should go in your functions file, or some file that gets included on all pages, before any output at all.

    – Magnus Eriksson
    Nov 22 '18 at 20:48













  • I have this code written directly into one of my pages. I tried placing the server side php script into functions.php but it didn't seem to make a difference.

    – RJ Stank
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:04











  • Your add_action hooks should be placed inside your theme's functions.php file (or in a standalone plugin).

    – cabrerahector
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:06











  • The ajax request isn't actually calling your page, it's calling ./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php. I would also recommend removing the initial . from the path. It should work from the functions.php-file. If it doesn't then there's something else wrong (which we can't see here).

    – Magnus Eriksson
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:07













  • Thank you Magnus and Hector. I removed the initial dot from the path and put the action hooks into the functions.php file and it's working now. That was helpful, most of the tutorials I found online don't mention placing those in functions.php.

    – RJ Stank
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:17
















0















I'm attempting to implement an AJAX request and response all within one wordpress page. My request is getting a response containing the page's html contents, and not the data that my response function is supposed to output. Do I need to enqueue the response script from a separate file?



b.on("click", function(){

var data =
data = retrieve_hst()
console.log(data)

jQuery.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php",
data: { action: "recordData", hst_data: data }
}).done(function(response) {
alert (response);
});

<?php

add_action('wp_ajax_recordData', 'recordData' );
add_action('wp_ajax_nopriv_wps_recordData', 'recordData' );
function recordData() {

$data = $_POST['hst_data'];
echo $data;
die();
}
?>
})









share|improve this question























  • Where is that PHP code located? It should go in your functions file, or some file that gets included on all pages, before any output at all.

    – Magnus Eriksson
    Nov 22 '18 at 20:48













  • I have this code written directly into one of my pages. I tried placing the server side php script into functions.php but it didn't seem to make a difference.

    – RJ Stank
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:04











  • Your add_action hooks should be placed inside your theme's functions.php file (or in a standalone plugin).

    – cabrerahector
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:06











  • The ajax request isn't actually calling your page, it's calling ./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php. I would also recommend removing the initial . from the path. It should work from the functions.php-file. If it doesn't then there's something else wrong (which we can't see here).

    – Magnus Eriksson
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:07













  • Thank you Magnus and Hector. I removed the initial dot from the path and put the action hooks into the functions.php file and it's working now. That was helpful, most of the tutorials I found online don't mention placing those in functions.php.

    – RJ Stank
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:17














0












0








0








I'm attempting to implement an AJAX request and response all within one wordpress page. My request is getting a response containing the page's html contents, and not the data that my response function is supposed to output. Do I need to enqueue the response script from a separate file?



b.on("click", function(){

var data =
data = retrieve_hst()
console.log(data)

jQuery.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php",
data: { action: "recordData", hst_data: data }
}).done(function(response) {
alert (response);
});

<?php

add_action('wp_ajax_recordData', 'recordData' );
add_action('wp_ajax_nopriv_wps_recordData', 'recordData' );
function recordData() {

$data = $_POST['hst_data'];
echo $data;
die();
}
?>
})









share|improve this question














I'm attempting to implement an AJAX request and response all within one wordpress page. My request is getting a response containing the page's html contents, and not the data that my response function is supposed to output. Do I need to enqueue the response script from a separate file?



b.on("click", function(){

var data =
data = retrieve_hst()
console.log(data)

jQuery.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: "./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php",
data: { action: "recordData", hst_data: data }
}).done(function(response) {
alert (response);
});

<?php

add_action('wp_ajax_recordData', 'recordData' );
add_action('wp_ajax_nopriv_wps_recordData', 'recordData' );
function recordData() {

$data = $_POST['hst_data'];
echo $data;
die();
}
?>
})






javascript php jquery ajax wordpress






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 22 '18 at 20:45









RJ StankRJ Stank

111




111













  • Where is that PHP code located? It should go in your functions file, or some file that gets included on all pages, before any output at all.

    – Magnus Eriksson
    Nov 22 '18 at 20:48













  • I have this code written directly into one of my pages. I tried placing the server side php script into functions.php but it didn't seem to make a difference.

    – RJ Stank
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:04











  • Your add_action hooks should be placed inside your theme's functions.php file (or in a standalone plugin).

    – cabrerahector
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:06











  • The ajax request isn't actually calling your page, it's calling ./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php. I would also recommend removing the initial . from the path. It should work from the functions.php-file. If it doesn't then there's something else wrong (which we can't see here).

    – Magnus Eriksson
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:07













  • Thank you Magnus and Hector. I removed the initial dot from the path and put the action hooks into the functions.php file and it's working now. That was helpful, most of the tutorials I found online don't mention placing those in functions.php.

    – RJ Stank
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:17



















  • Where is that PHP code located? It should go in your functions file, or some file that gets included on all pages, before any output at all.

    – Magnus Eriksson
    Nov 22 '18 at 20:48













  • I have this code written directly into one of my pages. I tried placing the server side php script into functions.php but it didn't seem to make a difference.

    – RJ Stank
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:04











  • Your add_action hooks should be placed inside your theme's functions.php file (or in a standalone plugin).

    – cabrerahector
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:06











  • The ajax request isn't actually calling your page, it's calling ./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php. I would also recommend removing the initial . from the path. It should work from the functions.php-file. If it doesn't then there's something else wrong (which we can't see here).

    – Magnus Eriksson
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:07













  • Thank you Magnus and Hector. I removed the initial dot from the path and put the action hooks into the functions.php file and it's working now. That was helpful, most of the tutorials I found online don't mention placing those in functions.php.

    – RJ Stank
    Nov 22 '18 at 21:17

















Where is that PHP code located? It should go in your functions file, or some file that gets included on all pages, before any output at all.

– Magnus Eriksson
Nov 22 '18 at 20:48







Where is that PHP code located? It should go in your functions file, or some file that gets included on all pages, before any output at all.

– Magnus Eriksson
Nov 22 '18 at 20:48















I have this code written directly into one of my pages. I tried placing the server side php script into functions.php but it didn't seem to make a difference.

– RJ Stank
Nov 22 '18 at 21:04





I have this code written directly into one of my pages. I tried placing the server side php script into functions.php but it didn't seem to make a difference.

– RJ Stank
Nov 22 '18 at 21:04













Your add_action hooks should be placed inside your theme's functions.php file (or in a standalone plugin).

– cabrerahector
Nov 22 '18 at 21:06





Your add_action hooks should be placed inside your theme's functions.php file (or in a standalone plugin).

– cabrerahector
Nov 22 '18 at 21:06













The ajax request isn't actually calling your page, it's calling ./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php. I would also recommend removing the initial . from the path. It should work from the functions.php-file. If it doesn't then there's something else wrong (which we can't see here).

– Magnus Eriksson
Nov 22 '18 at 21:07







The ajax request isn't actually calling your page, it's calling ./wp-admin/admin-ajax.php. I would also recommend removing the initial . from the path. It should work from the functions.php-file. If it doesn't then there's something else wrong (which we can't see here).

– Magnus Eriksson
Nov 22 '18 at 21:07















Thank you Magnus and Hector. I removed the initial dot from the path and put the action hooks into the functions.php file and it's working now. That was helpful, most of the tutorials I found online don't mention placing those in functions.php.

– RJ Stank
Nov 22 '18 at 21:17





Thank you Magnus and Hector. I removed the initial dot from the path and put the action hooks into the functions.php file and it's working now. That was helpful, most of the tutorials I found online don't mention placing those in functions.php.

– RJ Stank
Nov 22 '18 at 21:17












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