Book Image

JavaScript for .NET Developers

By : Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan
Book Image

JavaScript for .NET Developers

By: Ovais Mehboob Ahmed Khan

Overview of this book

If you want to improve responsiveness or the UX in your ASP.NET applications, JavaScript can be a life saver. In an age where server-side operations have shifted to the client, being able to handle JavaScript with confidence and fluency is vital for ASP.NET developers. There’s no point trying to fight it, so start learning with this book. Make sure your projects exceed user expectations. Begin by getting stuck into the basics of JavaScript, and explore the language in the context of ASP.NET Core. You’ll then find out how to put the principles into practice, as you learn how to develop a basic ASP.NET application using Angular 2 and TypeScript. You’ll also develop essential skills required to develop responsive apps, with a little help from AJAX, ensuring that you’re building projects that can be easily accessed across different devices. With guidance on Node.js and some neat techniques to test and debug a range of JavaScript libraries in Visual Studio, you’ll soon be well on your way to combining JavaScript with ASP.NET in a way that’s capable of meeting the challenges of modern web development head-on.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
JavaScript for .NET Developers
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Calling WCF services from JavaScript


To consume the WCF service methods from JavaScript, we need to expose them as the RESTful service methods that accept and return the data in either JSON or XML formats. This helps developers to consume the WCF services as easily as the REST services, and use them with the jQuery $.ajax or $.getJSON (shorthand method of $.ajax) methods. To expose a WCF service as a REST service, we need to annotate the WCF service methods with the WebGet or WebInvoke attributes. The WebGet attribute is mostly used when making any HTTP GET request, whereas WebInvoke is used for all HTTP request methods.

The following code shows the representation of using the WebGet attribute on a WCF operation contract that returns the product based on productCode passed during the method call:

[OperationContract]
[WebGet(ResponseFormat = WebMessageFormat.Json, BodyStyle = WebMessageBodyStyle.Wrapped, UriTemplate = "json/{productCode}")]
Product GetProduct(string productCode);

We can also...