In a React app component which handles Facebook-like content feeds, I am running into an error:
Feed.js:94 undefined "parsererror" "SyntaxError: Unexpected token < in JSON at position 0
I ran into a similar error which turned out to be a typo in the HTML within the render function, but that doesn't seem to be the case here.
More confusingly, I rolled the code back to an earlier, known-working version and I'm still getting the error.
Feed.js:
import React from 'react';
var ThreadForm = React.createClass({
getInitialState: function () {
return {author: '',
text: '',
included: '',
victim: ''
}
},
handleAuthorChange: function (e) {
this.setState({author: e.target.value})
},
handleTextChange: function (e) {
this.setState({text: e.target.value})
},
handleIncludedChange: function (e) {
this.setState({included: e.target.value})
},
handleVictimChange: function (e) {
this.setState({victim: e.target.value})
},
handleSubmit: function (e) {
e.preventDefault()
var author = this.state.author.trim()
var text = this.state.text.trim()
var included = this.state.included.trim()
var victim = this.state.victim.trim()
if (!text || !author || !included || !victim) {
return
}
this.props.onThreadSubmit({author: author,
text: text,
included: included,
victim: victim
})
this.setState({author: '',
text: '',
included: '',
victim: ''
})
},
render: function () {
return (
<form className="threadForm" onSubmit={this.handleSubmit}>
<input
type="text"
placeholder="Your name"
value={this.state.author}
onChange={this.handleAuthorChange} />
<input
type="text"
placeholder="Say something..."
value={this.state.text}
onChange={this.handleTextChange} />
<input
type="text"
placeholder="Name your victim"
value={this.state.victim}
onChange={this.handleVictimChange} />
<input
type="text"
placeholder="Who can see?"
value={this.state.included}
onChange={this.handleIncludedChange} />
<input type="submit" value="Post" />
</form>
)
}
})
var ThreadsBox = React.createClass({
loadThreadsFromServer: function () {
$.ajax({
url: this.props.url,
dataType: 'json',
cache: false,
success: function (data) {
this.setState({data: data})
}.bind(this),
error: function (xhr, status, err) {
console.error(this.props.url, status, err.toString())
}.bind(this)
})
},
handleThreadSubmit: function (thread) {
var threads = this.state.data
var newThreads = threads.concat([thread])
this.setState({data: newThreads})
$.ajax({
url: this.props.url,
dataType: 'json',
type: 'POST',
data: thread,
success: function (data) {
this.setState({data: data})
}.bind(this),
error: function (xhr, status, err) {
this.setState({data: threads})
console.error(this.props.url, status, err.toString())
}.bind(this)
})
},
getInitialState: function () {
return {data: []}
},
componentDidMount: function () {
this.loadThreadsFromServer()
setInterval(this.loadThreadsFromServer, this.props.pollInterval)
},
render: function () {
return (
<div className="threadsBox">
<h1>Feed</h1>
<div>
<ThreadForm onThreadSubmit={this.handleThreadSubmit} />
</div>
</div>
)
}
})
module.exports = ThreadsBox
In Chrome developer tools, the error seems to be coming from this function:
loadThreadsFromServer: function loadThreadsFromServer() {
$.ajax({
url: this.props.url,
dataType: 'json',
cache: false,
success: function (data) {
this.setState({ data: data });
}.bind(this),
error: function (xhr, status, err) {
console.error(this.props.url, status, err.toString());
}.bind(this)
});
},
with the line console.error(this.props.url, status, err.toString() underlined.
Since it looks like the error seems to have something to do with pulling JSON data from the server, I tried starting from a blank db, but the error persists. The error seems to be called in an infinite loop presumably as React continuously tries to connect to the server and eventually crashes the browser.
EDIT:
I've checked the server response with Chrome dev tools and Chrome REST client, and the data appears to be proper JSON.
EDIT 2:
It appears that though the intended API endpoint is indeed returning the correct JSON data and format, React is polling http://localhost:3000/?_=1463499798727 instead of the expected http://localhost:3001/api/threads.
I am running a webpack hot-reload server on port 3000 with the express app running on port 3001 to return the backend data. What's frustrating here is that this was working correctly the last time I worked on it and can't find what I could have possibly changed to break it.
The wording of the error message corresponds to what you get from Google Chrome when you run JSON.parse('<...'). I know you said the server is setting Content-Type:application/json, but I am led to believe the response body is actually HTML.
Feed.js:94 undefined "parsererror" "SyntaxError: Unexpected token < in JSON at position 0"
with the line console.error(this.props.url, status, err.toString()) underlined.
The err was actually thrown within jQuery, and passed to you as a variable err. The reason that line is underlined is simply because that is where you are logging it.
I would suggest that you add to your logging. Looking at the actual xhr (XMLHttpRequest) properties to learn more about the response. Try adding console.warn(xhr.responseText) and you will most likely see the HTML that is being received.
You're receiving HTML (or XML) back from the server, but the dataType: json is telling jQuery to parse as JSON. Check the "Network" tab in Chrome dev tools to see contents of the server's response.
SyntaxError: Unexpected token < in JSON at position 0
You are getting an HTML file (or XML) instead of json.
Html files begin with <!DOCTYPE html>.
I "achieved" this error by forgetting the https:// in my fetch method:
fetch(`/api.github.com/users/${login}`)
.then(response => response.json())
.then(setData);
I verified my hunch:
I logged the response as text instead of JSON.
fetch(`/api.github.com/users/${login}`)
.then(response => response.text())
.then(text => console.log(text))
.then(setData);
Yep, an html file.
Solution:
I fixed the error by adding back the https:// in my fetch method.
fetch(`https://api.github.com/users/${login}`)
.then(response => response.json())
.then(setData)
.catch(error => (console.log(error)));
This ended up being a permissions problem for me. I was trying to access a url I didn't have authorization for with cancan, so the url was switched to users/sign_in. the redirected url responds to html, not json. The first character in a html response is <.
In my case, I was getting this running webpack. It turned out to be corrupted somewhere in the local node_modules dir.
rm -rf node_modules
npm install
...was enough to get it working right again.
I experienced this error "SyntaxError: Unexpected token m in JSON at position", where the token 'm' can be any other characters.
It turned out that I missed one of the double quotes in the JSON object when I was using RESTconsole for DB test, as {"name: "math"}. The correct one should be {"name": "math"}.
It took me a lot effort to figure out this clumsy mistake. I am afraid others will run into similar issues.
This error occurs when you define the response as application/json and you are getting a HTML as a response. Basically, this happened when you are writing server side script for specific url with a response of JSON but the error format is in HTML.
Those who are using create-react-app and trying to fetch local json files.
As in create-react-app, webpack-dev-server is used to handle the request and for every request it serves the index.html. So you are getting
SyntaxError: Unexpected token < in JSON at position 0.
To solve this, you need to eject the app and modify the webpack-dev-server configuration file.
You can follow the steps from here.
I was facing the same issue.
I removed the dataType:'json' from the $.ajax method.
In a nutshell, if you're getting this error or a similar error, that means only one thing: Someplace in our codebase, we were expecting a valid JSON format to process, and we didn't get one. For example,
var string = "some string";
JSON.parse(string)
will throw an error, saying
Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token s in JSON at position 0
Because, the first character in string is s & it's not a valid JSON now. This can throw error in between also. like:
var invalidJSON= '{"foo" : "bar", "missedquotehere : "value" }';
JSON.parse(invalidJSON)
Will throw error:
VM598:1 Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token v in JSON at position 36
because we intentionally missed a quote in the JSON string invalidJSON at position 36.
And if you fix that:
var validJSON= '{"foo" : "bar", "missedquotehere" : "value" }';
JSON.parse(validJSON)
will give you an object in JSON.
This error can be thrown in any place & in any framework/library. Most of the time you may be reading a network response which is not valid JSON. So steps of debugging this issue can be like:
curl or hit the actual API you're calling.
Log/Copy the response and try to parse it with JSON.parse. If you're getting error, fix it.
If not, make sure your code is not mutating/changing the original response.
I my case the error was a result of me not assigning my return value to a variable. The following caused the error message:
return new JavaScriptSerializer().Serialize("hello");
I changed it to:
string H = "hello";
return new JavaScriptSerializer().Serialize(H);
Without the variable JSON is unable to properly format the data.
For future googlers:
This message will be generated if the server-side function crashes.
Or if the server-side function doesn't even exist ( i.e. Typo in function name ).
So - suppose you are using a GET request... and everything looks perfect and you've triple-checked everything...
Check that GET string one more time. Mine was:
'/theRouteIWant&someVar=Some value to send'
should be
'/theRouteIWant?someVar=Some value to send'
^
CrAsH ! ( ... invisibly, on the server ...)
Node/Express sends back the incredibly helpful message:
Uncaught (in promise) SyntaxError: Unexpected token < in JSON at position 0
In my case, for an Azure hosted Angular 2/4 site, my API call to mySite/api/... was redirecting due to mySite routing issues. So, it was returning the HTML from the redirected page instead of the api JSON. I added an exclusion in a web.config file for the api path.
I was not getting this error when developing locally because the Site and API were on different ports. There is probably a better way to do this ... but it worked.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<configuration>
<system.webServer>
<rewrite>
<rules>
<clear />
<!-- ignore static files -->
<rule name="AngularJS Conditions" stopProcessing="true">
<match url="(app/.*|css/.*|fonts/.*|assets/.*|images/.*|js/.*|api/.*)" />
<conditions logicalGrouping="MatchAll" trackAllCaptures="false" />
<action type="None" />
</rule>
<!--remaining all other url's point to index.html file -->
<rule name="AngularJS Wildcard" enabled="true">
<match url="(.*)" />
<conditions logicalGrouping="MatchAll" trackAllCaptures="false" />
<action type="Rewrite" url="index.html" />
</rule>
</rules>
</rewrite>
</system.webServer>
</configuration>
2022 UPDATE: having written this several years ago. I'd call this suggestion more of a workaround - a direct fix. The better hosting pattern is to simply not try to host these api paths under your website path; rather, host them on separate base URLs entirely. For my use case example, the API and Web path would be entirely separate Azure Web Services and would get different URL endpoints.
My problem was that I was getting the data back in a string which was not in a proper JSON format, which I was then trying to parse it. simple example: JSON.parse('{hello there}') will give an error at h. In my case the callback url was returning an unnecessary character before the objects: employee_names([{"name":.... and was getting error at e at 0. My callback URL itself had an issue which when fixed, returned only objects.
On a general level this error occurs when a JSON object is parsed that has syntax errors in it. Think of something like this, where the message property contains unescaped double quotes:
{
"data": [{
"code": "1",
"message": "This message has "unescaped" quotes, which is a JSON syntax error."
}]
}
If you have JSON in your app somewhere then it's good to run it through JSONLint to verify that it doesn't have a syntax error. Usually this isn't the case though in my experience, it's usually JSON returned from an API that's the culprit.
When an XHR request is made to an HTTP API that returns a response with a Content-Type:application/json; charset=UTF-8 header which contains invalid JSON in the response body you'll see this error.
If a server-side API controller is improperly handling a syntax error, and it's being printed out as part of the response, that will break the structure of JSON returned. A good example of this would be an API response containing a PHP Warning or Notice in the response body:
<b>Notice</b>: Undefined variable: something in <b>/path/to/some-api-controller.php</b> on line <b>99</b><br />
{
"success": false,
"data": [{ ... }]
}
95% of the time this is the source of the issue for me, and though it's somewhat addressed here in the other responses I didn't feel it was clearly described. Hopefully this helps, if you're looking for a handy way to track down which API response contains a JSON syntax error I've written an Angular module for that.
Here's the module:
/**
* Track Incomplete XHR Requests
*
* Extend httpInterceptor to track XHR completions and keep a queue
* of our HTTP requests in order to find if any are incomplete or
* never finish, usually this is the source of the issue if it's
* XHR related
*/
angular.module( "xhrErrorTracking", [
'ng',
'ngResource'
] )
.factory( 'xhrErrorTracking', [ '$q', function( $q ) {
var currentResponse = false;
return {
response: function( response ) {
currentResponse = response;
return response || $q.when( response );
},
responseError: function( rejection ) {
var requestDesc = currentResponse.config.method + ' ' + currentResponse.config.url;
if ( currentResponse.config.params ) requestDesc += ' ' + JSON.stringify( currentResponse.config.params );
console.warn( 'JSON Errors Found in XHR Response: ' + requestDesc, currentResponse );
return $q.reject( rejection );
}
};
} ] )
.config( [ '$httpProvider', function( $httpProvider ) {
$httpProvider.interceptors.push( 'xhrErrorTracking' );
} ] );
More details can be found in the blog article referenced above, I haven't posted everything found there here as it's probably not all relevant.
Make sure that response is in JSON format otherwise fires this error.
I got the same error while calling an API in React using the fetch API with the POST method.
Before:
fetch('/api/v1/tour',{
method:"POST",
headers:{"Content-type":"json/application"},
body:JSON.stringify(info)
})
.then((response)=>response.json())
.then((json)=>{
if(json.status === 'success')
alert(json.message)
else
console.log('something went wrong :(')
}).catch(e=>console.log(e))
I resolved the error by changing the headers to {"Content-type":"application/json"}:
After:
fetch('/api/v1/tour',{
method:"POST",
headers:{"Content-type":"application/json"},
body:JSON.stringify(info)
})
.then((response)=>response.json())
.then((json)=>{
if(json.status === 'success')
alert(json.message)
else
console.log('something went wrong :(')
}).catch(e=>console.log(e))
I had the same error message following a tutorial. Our issue seems to be 'url: this.props.url' in the ajax call. In React.DOM when you are creating your element, mine looks like this.
ReactDOM.render(
<CommentBox data="/api/comments" pollInterval={2000}/>,
document.getElementById('content')
);
Well, this CommentBox does not have a url in its props, just data. When I switched url: this.props.url -> url: this.props.data, it made the right call to the server and I got back the expected data.
I hope it helps.
The possibilities for this error are overwhelming.
In my case, I found that the issue was adding the homepage filed in package.json caused the issue.
Worth checking: in package.json change:
homepage: "www.example.com"
to
hompage: ""
Malformed JSON or HTML instead of JSON is the underlying cause of this issue, as described by the other answers, however in my case I couldn't reliably replicate this error, as if the server was sometimes returning valid JSON, and other times returning something else like an HTML error page or similar.
In order to avoid it breaking the page altogether, I resorted to manually trying to parse the returned content, and share it in case it helps anyone else resolve it for them.
const url = "https://my.server.com/getData";
fetch(url).then(response => {
if (!response.ok) return; // call failed
response.text().then(shouldBeJson => { // get the text-only of the response
let json = null;
try {
json = JSON.parse(shouldBeJson); // try to parse that text
} catch (e) {
console.warn(e); // json parsing failed
return;
};
if (!json) return; // extra check just to make sure we have something now.
// do something with my json object
});
});
While this obviously doesn't resolve the root cause of the issue, it can still help to handle the issue a bit more gracefully and take some kind of reasonable action in instances when it fails.
For the React app made by CRA there are two main problems we might face while fetching the JSON data of any <dummy.json>
file.
I have my dummy.json file in my project and am trying to fetch the JSON data from that file but I got two errors:
"SyntaxError: Unexpected token < in JSON at position 0 .
I got an HTML file rather than actual JSON Data in the response in the Network tab in Chrome or any browser.
Here are the main two reasons behind that which solved my issue.
Your JSON data is invalid in your JSON file.
It might be that the JSON file did not load properly for this so you just restart your React server. This is my issue, within React.
React direct running or access the public folder not the src folder.
How I solved it:
I moved my file into the public folder and access is directly in any file of the src folder.
Making a REST call in the Redux action.js:
export const fetchDummy = ()=>{
return (dispatch)=>{
dispatch(fetchDummyRequest());
fetch('./assets/DummyData.json')
.then(response => {
if (!response.ok) {
throw new Error("HTTP error " + response.status);
}
return response.json();
})
.then(result => {
dispatch(fetchDummySuccess(result))
})
.catch(function (err) {
dispatch(fetchDummyFailure(err))
})
}
}
This might be old. But it just occurred in Angular where the content type for request and response were different in my code. So check headers for
let headers = new Headers({
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
**Accept**: 'application/json'
});
in React axios
axios({
method:'get',
url:'http:// ',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
Accept: 'application/json'
},
responseType:'json'
})
jQuery Ajax:
$.ajax({
url: this.props.url,
dataType: 'json',
**headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
Accept: 'application/json'
},**
cache: false,
success: function (data) {
this.setState({ data: data });
}.bind(this),
error: function (xhr, status, err) {
console.error(this.props.url, status, err.toString());
}.bind(this)
});
},
After spending a lot of time with this, I found out that in my case the problem was having "homepage" defined on my package.json file made my app not work on firebase (same 'token' error).
I created my react app using create-react-app, then I used the firebase guide on the READ.me file to deploy to github pages, realized I had to do extra work for the router to work, and switched to firebase. github guide had added the homepage key on package.json and caused the deploy issue.
Protip: Testing json on a local Node.js server? Make sure you don't already have something routing to that path
'/:url(app|assets|stuff|etc)';
For me, this happened when one of the properties on the object I was returning as JSON threw an exception.
public Dictionary<string, int> Clients { get; set; }
public int CRCount
{
get
{
var count = 0;
//throws when Clients is null
foreach (var c in Clients) {
count += c.Value;
}
return count;
}
}
Adding a null check, fixed it for me:
public Dictionary<string, int> Clients { get; set; }
public int CRCount
{
get
{
var count = 0;
if (Clients != null) {
foreach (var c in Clients) {
count += c.Value;
}
}
return count;
}
}
just something basic to check, make sure you dont have anything commented out in the json file
//comments here will not be parsed and throw error
In python you can use json.Dump(str) before send result to html template.
with this command string convert to correct json format and send to html template. After send this result to JSON.parse(result) , this is correct response and you can use this.
For some, this may help you guys:
I had a similar experience with Wordpress REST API. I even used Postman to check if I had the correct routes or endpoint. I later found out that I accidentally put an "echo" inside my script - hooks:
Debug & check your console
Cause of the error
So basically, this means that I printed a value that isn't JSON that is mixed with the script that causes AJAX error - "SyntaxError: Unexpected token r in JSON at position 0"
In my case (backend), I was using res.send(token);
Everything got fixed when I changed to res.send(data);
You may want to check this if everything is working and posting as intended, but the error keeps popping up in your front-end.
In my Case there was problem with "Bearer" in header ideally it should be "Bearer "(space after the end character) but in my case it was "Bearer" there was no space after the character. Hope it helps some one!
I am creating a web application that allows a user to load data in JSON format. I am currently using the following function to read JSON files that I have saved on my local disk:
function retrieveJSON(url, callback)
{
// this is needed because FireFox tries to parse files as XML
$.ajaxSetup({ mimeType: "text/plain" });
// send out an AJAX request and return the result
$.getJSON(url, function(response) {
console.log("Data acquired successfully");
callback(response);
}).error(function(jqXHR, textStatus, errorThrown) {
console.log("Error...\n" + textStatus + "\n" + errorThrown);
});
}
This works perfectly for well-formed JSON data. However, for malformed data, the console log displays the following:
Error...
parsererror
SyntaxError: JSON.parse: unexpected character
This is almost entirely unhelpful because it does not tell me what the unexpected character is or what line number it can be found on. I could use a JSON validator to correct the file on my local disk, but this is not an option when the page is loading files from remote URLs on the web.
How can I obtain the location of any error? I would like to obtain the token if possible, but I need to obtain the line number at minimum. There is a project requirement to display an excerpt of the JSON code to the user and highlight the line where any error occurred.
I am currently using jQuery, but jQuery is not a project requirement, so if another API or JSON parser provides this functionality, I could use that instead.
Yeah, life with deadlines is never easy :).
This might help you out, after couple of hours googling around, I've found jsonlint on Git Hub. It looks promising, it includes a shell script that could be used on server side, and there is a browser JavaScript version of it that seems to be exactly what you were looking for.
Hope that this will help You.
i agree that life with deadlines is hard.
i'm incredibly happy that i don't have to live with deadlines, i'm my own boss.
so in search of a better solution to this problem, i came up with the following :
...
readConfig : function () {
jQuery.ajax({
type : 'GET',
url : 'config.json',
success : function (data, ts, xhr) {
var d = JSON.parse(data);
},
error : function (xhr, ajaxOptions, thrownError) {
if (typeof thrownError.message=='string') {
// ./config.json contains invalid data.
var
text = xhr.responseText,
pos = parseInt(thrownError.message.match(/position (\d+)/)[1]),
html = text.substr(0,pos)+'<span style="color:red;font-weight:bold;">__'+text.substr(pos,1)+'__</span>'+text.substr(pos+1, text.length-pos-1);
cm.install.displayErrorMsg('Could not read ./config.json :(<br/>'+thrownError+'<br/>'+html);
} else {
cm.install.displayErrorMsg('Error retrieving ./config.json<br/>HTTP error code : '+xhr.status);
};
}
});
},
...
EDIT: I've gotten the "famous question" badge with this question, so I figured I'd come back to it and stick what happened to me right at the very tippy top for people searching it to get an answer right away.
Basically, I was new to JSON. JSON is an object (obviously), as it contains all kinds of stuff! So I was like "Hey, javascript, just pop up an alert with all of this JSON data", expecting it to give me the JSON data as a string. But javascript doesn't do that (which is good!), so it was like "Hey, this is how we display objects, [object Object]".
What I could've done is something like alert(obj.DATA[0][1]) and it would've shown me that bit of the object.
What I really wanted was to verify that I was making good JSON data, which I could've checked with JSON.stringify.
Anyway, back to our regularly scheduled questions!
I'm trying to get some JSON data with an ajax call, but jQuery doesn't seem to like my JSON.
if I do something like:
function init2() {
alert("inside init2");
jQuery.ajax({
url: "/Mobile_ReportingChain.cfm",
type: "POST",
async: false,
success: function (data) {
alert(data);
var obj = jQuery.parseJSON(data);
alert(obj);
}
});
}
I get this as from alert(data):
{"COLUMNS":["MFIRST_NAME","MLAST_NAME","MMDDL_NAME","MEMPLY_ID","MAIM_NBR","EMPLY_ID"],
"DATA":[
["FNAME1 ","LNAME1 ","MI1 ","000-14-7189","026-0010","000-62-7276"]
,["FNAME2 ","LNAME2 ","MI2 ","000-01-2302","101-1850","000-14-7189"]
,["FNAME3 ","LNAME3 ","MI3 ","000-91-3619","102-1000","000-01-2302"]
,["FNAME4 ","LNAME4 ","MI4 ","000-25-9687","102-1000","000-91-3619"]
]}
which JSONLint says is valid json. alert(obj) gives me this, however:
[object Object]
adding dataType: "json" or "text json" just makes it report [object Object] at alert(data).
I'd really like to get this figured out, does anyone know why it's doing this? I'm pretty new at jQuery, my goal is to get an array for each of the columns. The same code I'm using has worked on a different page it looks like, which is what's bothering me the most.
The alert() function can only display a string of text. As its only parameter it takes a string or an object. The object will however be converted into a string that can be displayed.
When fetching JSON through jQuery, the $.ajax() method will automatically parse the JSON and turn it into a JavaScript object for you. Your data variable is therefor a JavaScript object, and not a JSON string as one might expect.
Since alert() only can display strings, when trying to alert your data object, your object will be turned into its string representation. The string representation of a JavaScript object is [object Object].
For debug-purposes you can use console.log(data) instead. You can then inspect the object and its content through the console in your browsers developer tools.
function init2() {
jQuery.ajax({
url: "/Mobile_ReportingChain.cfm",
type: "POST",
dataType: "json",
async: false,
success: function (data) {
console.log(data);
}
});
}
If you for some reason still want to alert the JSON-data, then you would have to turn your data object back into a JSON-string. To do that you can make use of JSON.stringify:
alert(JSON.stringify(data));
it wants a string
var obj = $.parseJSON(JSON.stringify(data));
try sending that object to console.log. You'll get a clearer picture what does it contain.
Also, put dataType: 'json' and remove parseJSON because it's all the same.
This is how it's supposed to work. Your JSON becomes a javascript object. You can then manipulate that object as a regular javascript object.
data.COLUMNS for instance should return an array.
[object Object] is the string representation of a javascript object.
Try accessing properties of the object.
alert(data.COLUMNS[0]);
jQuery.parseJSON will convert the json string into json object so alert(obj) will show you [object Object] since it is an object.
If you want to see what obj contains then use console.log(obj) and then check console log message.
$.getJSON( "UI/entidades.json.php", function(data){
result = JSON.stringify(data);
alert(result)
console.log(result)
})
(I knows this is an jquery problem; but just bear with me for a min. so that i can explain why this problem occurred to me in the first place).
I wanted to fill in the gaps made my deletion of records in my MySQL table ( primary key that was auto increment. So when records where deleted in between my id had missing keys. I though some mechanism to show those missing keys. So i created the code that created an array through a loop then deleted those keys that were present and echo backed that array (of course json_encode that array).
But to my amazement what ever I did it always end up giving me [object Object].
It baffled me a lot that were was the problem.
Solution: Just realigning the array and all my problem gone.
Below I would give an simplified example.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script src="../js/jquery/jquery3.x/jquery-3.3.1.min.js"></script>
<title></title>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function () {
$('#generate').click(function () {
$.get('tmp2.php?tab=1', function (data) {
var retStr = '<table>';
var par = $.parseJSON(data);
$(par).each(function () {
retStr += '<tr><td>' + this + '</td></tr>';
});
retStr += '</table>';
$('#res').html(retStr);
});
});
});
</script>
</head>
<body>
<input type="button" value="generate" id="generate" />
<div id="res"></div>
</body>
</html>
And the controller
<?php
if (!empty($_GET['tab'])) {
$ids = array();
for ($i = 0; $i < 50; $i++)
$ids[] = $i;
for ($i = 0; $i < 50; $i = $i + 2)
unset($ids[$i]);
// echo json_encode($ids); // this will generate [object Object]
$res = array();
foreach ($ids as $key => $value) {
$res[] = $value;
}
echo json_encode($res);
exit();
}
?>