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javascript - Why do we pass null to XMLHttpRequest.send?

Why is send so often called as

xhr.send(null)

instead of

xhr.send()

?

W3, MDN, and MSDN all state that it's optional. Furthermore, the ActiveX control doesn't seem to need the argument:

hr=pIXMLHTTPRequest.CreateInstance("Msxml2.XMLHTTP.6.0");
SUCCEEDED(hr) ? 0 : throw hr;

hr=pIXMLHTTPRequest->open("GET", "http://localhost/books.xml ", false);
SUCCEEDED(hr) ? 0 : throw hr;

hr=pIXMLHTTPRequest->send(); // <-- this line
SUCCEEDED(hr) ? 0 : throw hr;

The practice of send(null) goes back at least as far as 2005 in Google Maps, but being minified, there's no explanation:

Y.asynchronousTransform = function (qc, vb, kc, Nc, Ba) {
    if (m.type == 3) return;
    var cc = Y.getCached(kc);
    if (cc) {
        cc.transformToHTML(qc, vb);
        if (Nc) Nc();
        return
    }
    var yc = qa.create(Ba);
    var sa = Xd.create();
    nd('<a href="' + kc.xmlEscape() + '">' + kc.xmlEscape() + "</a>", 0);
    sa.open("GET", kc, true);
    sa.onreadystatechange = function () {
        if (sa.readyState == 4) {
            if (yc.isValid()) {
                try {
                    var Db = sa.responseXML;
                    var cc = Y.create(Db);
                    Y.cache(kc, cc);
                    cc.transformToHTML(qc, vb);
                    if (Nc) Nc()
                } catch (b) {}
            }
        }
    };
    sa.send(null)
}
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If you'll take a look at an old specification of XMLHttpRequest, it seems like as though the W3C did not require that the parameter be optional at one point, which may have led to people supplying an explicit null value 'just in case'.

(search for 'SHOULD support the send') http://web.archive.org/web/20060409155734/http://www.w3.org/TR/XMLHttpRequest/

Another plausible reason I've come across comes from a translation of a russian page, viewable here: long Google Translate link (search for 'GET-Request for Version without ActiveX')

When you send a GET-request for version without ActiveX, you must specify null, otherwise you can not specify any parameters. Will not fail if GET is always specified null:

I have no idea if this is true or not but it seems plausible that if the GET parameters were included in the body, that the body may not have been generated if the data value was 'undefined'.

Unfortunately, I was unable to find anything more conclusive in my search.


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