You problem here is, that .ajax()
fires an asyncronous running Ajax request. That means, .ajax()
returns immediately, non-blocking. So your queue the functions but they will fire almost at the same time like you described.
I don't think the .queue()
is a good place to have ajax requests in, it's more intended for the use of fx methods
. You need a simple manager.
var ajaxManager = (function() {
var requests = [];
return {
addReq: function(opt) {
requests.push(opt);
},
removeReq: function(opt) {
if( $.inArray(opt, requests) > -1 )
requests.splice($.inArray(opt, requests), 1);
},
run: function() {
var self = this,
oriSuc;
if( requests.length ) {
oriSuc = requests[0].complete;
requests[0].complete = function() {
if( typeof(oriSuc) === 'function' ) oriSuc();
requests.shift();
self.run.apply(self, []);
};
$.ajax(requests[0]);
} else {
self.tid = setTimeout(function() {
self.run.apply(self, []);
}, 1000);
}
},
stop: function() {
requests = [];
clearTimeout(this.tid);
}
};
}());
This is far away from being perfect, I just want to demonstrate the way to go. The above example could be used in a way like
$(function() {
ajaxManager.run();
$("a.button").click(function(){
ajaxManager.addReq({
type: 'POST',
url: 'whatever.html',
data: params,
success: function(data){
// do stuff
}
});
});
});
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