Book Image

Moodle JavaScript Cookbook

Book Image

Moodle JavaScript Cookbook

Overview of this book

Moodle is the best e-learning solution on the block and is revolutionizing courses on the Web. Using JavaScript in Moodle is very useful to administrators and dynamic developers as it uses built-in libraries to provide the modern and dynamic experience that is expected by web users today.The Moodle JavaScript Cookbook will take you through the basics of combining Moodle with JavaScript and its various libraries and explain how JavaScript can be used along with Moodle. It will explain how to integrate Yahoo! User Interface Library (YUI) with Moodle. YUI will be the main focus of the book, and is the key to implementing modern, dynamic feature-rich interfaces to help your users get a more satisfying and productive Moodle experience. It will enable you to add effects, make forms more responsive, use AJAX and animation, all to create a richer user experience. You will be able to work through a range of YUI features, such as pulling in and displaying information from other websites, enhancing existing UI elements to make users' lives easier, and even how to add animation to your pages for a nice finishing touch.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Moodle JavaScript Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Using PHP as a proxy to load data from an external domain


If you wish to retrieve data from a trusted external source that does not have a valid cross-domain policy file installed, then you can use a local PHP file as a proxy to download the file for you.

This method has the disadvantage that the overhead of retrieving the file is moved to the server rather than the client as in the previous YUI method. However, it may need to be used as a last resort when it is not feasible to install a cross-domain policy file on the remote domain.

How to do it...

  1. 1. This example uses one PHP file, get_external_data.php:

    <?php
    require_once('../config.php');
    require_once('../lib/filelib.php');
    $uri = 'http://remote.example.com/text.txt';
    echo download_file_content($uri);
    ?>
    
  2. 2. First, we set up the basic Moodle environment by including the global config.php file.

  3. 3. Next, we include Moodle's file API library which provides the function download_file_content.

  4. 4. We now define the URI of the file we wish...