A situation I ran across this week: we have a jQuery Ajax call that goes back to the server to get data
$.ajax(
{
type: "POST",
contentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8",
url: fullMethodPath,
data: data,
dataType: "json",
success: function(response) {
successCallback(response);
},
error: errorCallback,
complete: completeCallback
});
fullMethodPath
is a link to a static method on a page (let's say /MyPage.aspx/MyMethod
).
public partial class MyPage : Page
{
// snip
[WebMethod]
public static AjaxData MyMethod(string param1, int param2)
{
// return some data here
}
}
This works, no problem.
A colleague had attempted to replace this call with one where type was "GET". It broke, I had to fix it. Eventually, I went back to POST because we needed the fix quick, but it has been bugging me because semantically a GET is more "correct" in this case.
As I understand it, jQuery translates an object in data to a Query String: /MyPage.aspx/MyMethod?param1=value1¶m2=value2
but all I could get back was the content of the page MyPage.aspx
.
Is that just a "feature" of Page methods, or is there a way of making a GET request work?
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