playframework problem with routes:NoRouteFoundException - exception

Trying out the custom editor portion in play tutorial,I created the routes as below
GET /admin/myPosts/{id} Admin.form
GET /admin/new Admin.form
POST /admin/new Admin.save
GET /admin? Admin.index
* /admin module:crud
and created the methods in Admin class
..
public static void form() {
logger.info("Admin.form()");
render();
}
public static void save(String title,String content,String tags) {
User author = User.find("byEmail",Security.connected()).first();
logger.info("author="+author.getEmail());
//create a post
Post newPost = new Post(author,title,content);
logger.info("new post="+newPost.getTitle()+" created");
//set tags
String[] tagArray = tags.split("\\s+");
logger.info("tag array="+tagArray.length);
for(String tag : tagArray ) {
logger.info("tag="+tag);
if(tag.trim().length() > 0) {
newPost.getTags().add(Tag.findOrCreateByName(tag));
}
}
validation.valid(newPost);
if(validation.hasErrors()) {
logger.error("error in post");
render("#form", newPost);
}
newPost.save();
logger.info("new post saved");
logger.info("going to index");
index();
}
public static void form(Long id) {
if(id!=null) {
Post post = Post.findById(id);
render(post);
}
render();
}
...
the views/Admin/index.html is
#{extends 'admin.html'/}
Welcome ${user}!! <span>you have written ${posts.size()?:'no'} ${posts.pluralize('post','posts')} so far </span>
#{list items:posts,as:'post' }
<p class="post ${post_parity}">
${post_index}.${ post.title}
</p>
#{/list}
<p id="newPost">
<span>+</span>write new post
</p>
When I click on login ,the line containing the link "#{Admin.form(post.id)}" causes
Internal Server Error (500) for request GET /admin?
No route found (In /app/views/Admin/index.html around line 7)
No route able to invoke action Admin.form was found.
play.exceptions.NoRouteFoundException: No route found
at play.templates.BaseTemplate.throwException(BaseTemplate.java:80)
at play.templates.GroovyTemplate.internalRender(GroovyTemplate.java:237)
at play.templates.Template.render(Template.java:26)
at play.templates.GroovyTemplate.render(GroovyTemplate.java:184)
at play.mvc.results.RenderTemplate.<init>(RenderTemplate.java:24)
at play.mvc.Controller.renderTemplate(Controller.java:659)
at play.mvc.Controller.renderTemplate(Controller.java:639)
at play.mvc.Controller.render(Controller.java:694)
at controllers.Admin.index(Admin.java:33)
at play.mvc.ActionInvoker.invokeWithContinuation(ActionInvoker.java:543)
at play.mvc.ActionInvoker.invoke(ActionInvoker.java:499)
at play.mvc.ActionInvoker.invokeControllerMethod(ActionInvoker.java:475)
at play.mvc.ActionInvoker.invokeControllerMethod(ActionInvoker.java:470)
at play.mvc.ActionInvoker.invoke(ActionInvoker.java:158)
at Invocation.HTTP Request(Play!)
How do I solve this?Can someone help?Is there a problem in the order of paths in routes?The crud and secure modules are available as per the startup messages
update:
the stacktrace as shown by play is here
I tried to change the order of entries in the routes file..Put the * /admin path before GET / admin? as below ..Now I am getting a strangely rendered page
GET /admin/myPosts/{id} Admin.form
GET /admin/new Admin.form
POST /admin/new Admin.save
* /admin module:crud
GET /admin? Admin.index
This is where bob#gmail ends up when logged in!
For the url http://localhost:9000/admin?,the page should be showing MyPosts link as selected..but here the Comments link is shown as selected..
So, it must be the problem with the order of paths in routes file...specifically that of * /admin? ..can someone tell me where exactly it should be put?
There was a slight problem in the routes file(a missing /)
complete routes file is
# Routes
# This file defines all application routes (Higher priority routes first)
# ~~~~
#import crud routes
GET /admin/myPosts/{id} Admin.form
GET /admin/new Admin.form
POST /admin/myPosts/{id} Admin.save
POST /admin/new Admin.save
GET /admin/? Admin.index
* /admin module:crud
# Home page
GET / Application.index
# details of a post
GET /posts/{<[0-9]+>id} Application.showPost
GET /captcha Application.captcha
GET /posts/{tag} Application.taggedWith
POST /posts/{<[0-9]+>id}/comments Application.postComment
# Ignore favicon requests
GET /favicon.ico 404
# Map static resources from the /app/public folder to the /public path
GET /public/ staticDir:public
# Catch all
# Import Secure routes
* / module:secure
* /{controller}/{action} {controller}.{action}
The admin page is shown properly when I omit the Admin.form(post.id) link in index.html
#{list items:posts,as:'post' }
<p class="post ${post_parity}">
${post_index}.${ post.title}
</p>
#{/list}
<p id="newPost">
<span>+</span>write new post
</p>
As soon as the link is added
#{list items:posts, as:'post'}
<p class="post ${post_parity}">
${post.title}
</p>
#{/list}
The No route able to invoke action Admin.form was found error message occurs

The confusion was caused because ,in the Admin class there were 2 form() methods ,one with no arg,another with id as arg.The no arg method was placed before the other..causing the router much confusion..
The problem was solved when method form() was replaced by method form(Long id)

Are you sure it is that route that is causing the problem? I have just tried this scenario and cannot recreate the error (although not using the CRUD and Secure modules), however as these routes come later in the routes file, these should not be causing issue.
I think it may be the following line of code causing issues.
<span>+</span>write new post
Specifically, this bit #{form()}
I think it should probably read
#{Admin.form()}

Related

How Can I get the tag id on clicked in Django? [duplicate]

I am new to Django and pretty new to Ajax. I am working on a project where I need to integrate the two. I believe that I understand the principles behind them both, but have not found a good explanation of the two together.
Could someone give me a quick explanation of how the codebase must change with the two of them integrating together?
For example, can I still use the HttpResponse with Ajax, or do my responses have to change with the use of Ajax? If so, could you please provide an example of how the responses to the requests must change? If it makes any difference, the data I am returning is JSON.
Even though this isn't entirely in the SO spirit, I love this question, because I had the same trouble when I started, so I'll give you a quick guide. Obviously you don't understand the principles behind them (don't take it as an offense, but if you did you wouldn't be asking).
Django is server-side. It means, say a client goes to a URL, you have a function inside views that renders what he sees and returns a response in HTML. Let's break it up into examples:
views.py:
def hello(request):
return HttpResponse('Hello World!')
def home(request):
return render_to_response('index.html', {'variable': 'world'})
index.html:
<h1>Hello {{ variable }}, welcome to my awesome site</h1>
urls.py:
url(r'^hello/', 'myapp.views.hello'),
url(r'^home/', 'myapp.views.home'),
That's an example of the simplest of usages. Going to 127.0.0.1:8000/hello means a request to the hello() function, going to 127.0.0.1:8000/home will return the index.html and replace all the variables as asked (you probably know all this by now).
Now let's talk about AJAX. AJAX calls are client-side code that does asynchronous requests. That sounds complicated, but it simply means it does a request for you in the background and then handles the response. So when you do an AJAX call for some URL, you get the same data you would get as a user going to that place.
For example, an AJAX call to 127.0.0.1:8000/hello will return the same thing it would as if you visited it. Only this time, you have it inside a JavaScript function and you can deal with it however you'd like. Let's look at a simple use case:
$.ajax({
url: '127.0.0.1:8000/hello',
type: 'get', // This is the default though, you don't actually need to always mention it
success: function(data) {
alert(data);
},
failure: function(data) {
alert('Got an error dude');
}
});
The general process is this:
The call goes to the URL 127.0.0.1:8000/hello as if you opened a new tab and did it yourself.
If it succeeds (status code 200), do the function for success, which will alert the data received.
If fails, do a different function.
Now what would happen here? You would get an alert with 'hello world' in it. What happens if you do an AJAX call to home? Same thing, you'll get an alert stating <h1>Hello world, welcome to my awesome site</h1>.
In other words - there's nothing new about AJAX calls. They are just a way for you to let the user get data and information without leaving the page, and it makes for a smooth and very neat design of your website. A few guidelines you should take note of:
Learn jQuery. I cannot stress this enough. You're gonna have to understand it a little to know how to handle the data you receive. You'll also need to understand some basic JavaScript syntax (not far from python, you'll get used to it). I strongly recommend Envato's video tutorials for jQuery, they are great and will put you on the right path.
When to use JSON?. You're going to see a lot of examples where the data sent by the Django views is in JSON. I didn't go into detail on that, because it isn't important how to do it (there are plenty of explanations abound) and a lot more important when. And the answer to that is - JSON data is serialized data. That is, data you can manipulate. Like I mentioned, an AJAX call will fetch the response as if the user did it himself. Now say you don't want to mess with all the html, and instead want to send data (a list of objects perhaps). JSON is good for this, because it sends it as an object (JSON data looks like a python dictionary), and then you can iterate over it or do something else that removes the need to sift through useless html.
Add it last. When you build a web app and want to implement AJAX - do yourself a favor. First, build the entire app completely devoid of any AJAX. See that everything is working. Then, and only then, start writing the AJAX calls. That's a good process that helps you learn a lot as well.
Use chrome's developer tools. Since AJAX calls are done in the background it's sometimes very hard to debug them. You should use the chrome developer tools (or similar tools such as firebug) and console.log things to debug. I won't explain in detail, just google around and find out about it. It would be very helpful to you.
CSRF awareness. Finally, remember that post requests in Django require the csrf_token. With AJAX calls, a lot of times you'd like to send data without refreshing the page. You'll probably face some trouble before you'd finally remember that - wait, you forgot to send the csrf_token. This is a known beginner roadblock in AJAX-Django integration, but after you learn how to make it play nice, it's easy as pie.
That's everything that comes to my head. It's a vast subject, but yeah, there's probably not enough examples out there. Just work your way there, slowly, you'll get it eventually.
Further from yuvi's excellent answer, I would like to add a small specific example on how to deal with this within Django (beyond any js that will be used). The example uses AjaxableResponseMixin and assumes an Author model.
import json
from django.http import HttpResponse
from django.views.generic.edit import CreateView
from myapp.models import Author
class AjaxableResponseMixin(object):
"""
Mixin to add AJAX support to a form.
Must be used with an object-based FormView (e.g. CreateView)
"""
def render_to_json_response(self, context, **response_kwargs):
data = json.dumps(context)
response_kwargs['content_type'] = 'application/json'
return HttpResponse(data, **response_kwargs)
def form_invalid(self, form):
response = super(AjaxableResponseMixin, self).form_invalid(form)
if self.request.is_ajax():
return self.render_to_json_response(form.errors, status=400)
else:
return response
def form_valid(self, form):
# We make sure to call the parent's form_valid() method because
# it might do some processing (in the case of CreateView, it will
# call form.save() for example).
response = super(AjaxableResponseMixin, self).form_valid(form)
if self.request.is_ajax():
data = {
'pk': self.object.pk,
}
return self.render_to_json_response(data)
else:
return response
class AuthorCreate(AjaxableResponseMixin, CreateView):
model = Author
fields = ['name']
Source: Django documentation, Form handling with class-based views
The link to version 1.6 of Django is no longer available updated to version 1.11
I am writing this because the accepted answer is pretty old, it needs a refresher.
So this is how I would integrate Ajax with Django in 2019 :) And lets take a real example of when we would need Ajax :-
Lets say I have a model with registered usernames and with the help of Ajax I wanna know if a given username exists.
html:
<p id="response_msg"></p>
<form id="username_exists_form" method='GET'>
Name: <input type="username" name="username" />
<button type='submit'> Check </button>
</form>
ajax:
$('#username_exists_form').on('submit',function(e){
e.preventDefault();
var username = $(this).find('input').val();
$.get('/exists/',
{'username': username},
function(response){ $('#response_msg').text(response.msg); }
);
});
urls.py:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.urls import path
from . import views
urlpatterns = [
path('admin/', admin.site.urls),
path('exists/', views.username_exists, name='exists'),
]
views.py:
def username_exists(request):
data = {'msg':''}
if request.method == 'GET':
username = request.GET.get('username').lower()
exists = Usernames.objects.filter(name=username).exists()
data['msg'] = username
data['msg'] += ' already exists.' if exists else ' does not exists.'
return JsonResponse(data)
Also render_to_response which is deprecated and has been replaced by render and from Django 1.7 onwards instead of HttpResponse we use JsonResponse for ajax response. Because it comes with a JSON encoder, so you don’t need to serialize the data before returning the response object but HttpResponse is not deprecated.
Simple and Nice. You don't have to change your views. Bjax handles all your links. Check this out:
Bjax
Usage:
<script src="bjax.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<link href="bjax.min.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
Finally, include this in the HEAD of your html:
$('a').bjax();
For more settings, checkout demo here:
Bjax Demo
AJAX is the best way to do asynchronous tasks. Making asynchronous calls is something common in use in any website building. We will take a short example to learn how we can implement AJAX in Django. We need to use jQuery so as to write less javascript.
This is Contact example, which is the simplest example, I am using to explain the basics of AJAX and its implementation in Django. We will be making POST request in this example. I am following one of the example of this post: https://djangopy.org/learn/step-up-guide-to-implement-ajax-in-django
models.py
Let's first create the model of Contact, having basic details.
from django.db import models
class Contact(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length = 100)
email = models.EmailField()
message = models.TextField()
timestamp = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add = True)
def __str__(self):
return self.name
forms.py
Create the form for the above model.
from django import forms
from .models import Contact
class ContactForm(forms.ModelForm):
class Meta:
model = Contact
exclude = ["timestamp", ]
views.py
The views look similar to the basic function-based create view, but instead of returning with render, we are using JsonResponse response.
from django.http import JsonResponse
from .forms import ContactForm
def postContact(request):
if request.method == "POST" and request.is_ajax():
form = ContactForm(request.POST)
form.save()
return JsonResponse({"success":True}, status=200)
return JsonResponse({"success":False}, status=400)
urls.py
Let's create the route of the above view.
from django.contrib import admin
from django.urls import path
from app_1 import views as app1
urlpatterns = [
path('ajax/contact', app1.postContact, name ='contact_submit'),
]
template
Moving to frontend section, render the form which was created above enclosing form tag along with csrf_token and submit button. Note that we have included the jquery library.
<form id = "contactForm" method= "POST">{% csrf_token %}
{{ contactForm.as_p }}
<input type="submit" name="contact-submit" class="btn btn-primary" />
</form>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
Javascript
Let's now talk about javascript part, on the form submit we are making ajax request of type POST, taking the form data and sending to the server side.
$("#contactForm").submit(function(e){
// prevent from normal form behaviour
e.preventDefault();
// serialize the form data
var serializedData = $(this).serialize();
$.ajax({
type : 'POST',
url : "{% url 'contact_submit' %}",
data : serializedData,
success : function(response){
//reset the form after successful submit
$("#contactForm")[0].reset();
},
error : function(response){
console.log(response)
}
});
});
This is just a basic example to get started with AJAX with django, if you want to get dive with several more examples, you can go through this article: https://djangopy.org/learn/step-up-guide-to-implement-ajax-in-django
Easy ajax calls with Django
(26.10.2020)
This is in my opinion much cleaner and simpler than the correct answer. This one also includes how to add the csrftoken and using login_required methods with ajax.
The view
#login_required
def some_view(request):
"""Returns a json response to an ajax call. (request.user is available in view)"""
# Fetch the attributes from the request body
data_attribute = request.GET.get('some_attribute') # Make sure to use POST/GET correctly
# DO SOMETHING...
return JsonResponse(data={}, status=200)
urls.py
urlpatterns = [
path('some-view-does-something/', views.some_view, name='doing-something'),
]
The ajax call
The ajax call is quite simple, but is sufficient for most cases. You can fetch some values and put them in the data object, then in the view depicted above you can fetch their values again via their names.
You can find the csrftoken function in django's documentation. Basically just copy it and make sure it is rendered before your ajax call so that the csrftoken variable is defined.
$.ajax({
url: "{% url 'doing-something' %}",
headers: {'X-CSRFToken': csrftoken},
data: {'some_attribute': some_value},
type: "GET",
dataType: 'json',
success: function (data) {
if (data) {
console.log(data);
// call function to do something with data
process_data_function(data);
}
}
});
Add HTML to current page with ajax
This might be a bit off topic but I have rarely seen this used and it is a great way to minimize window relocations as well as manual html string creation in javascript.
This is very similar to the one above but this time we are rendering html from the response without reloading the current window.
If you intended to render some kind of html from the data you would receive as a response to the ajax call, it might be easier to send a HttpResponse back from the view instead of a JsonResponse. That allows you to create html easily which can then be inserted into an element.
The view
# The login required part is of course optional
#login_required
def create_some_html(request):
"""In this particular example we are filtering some model by a constraint sent in by
ajax and creating html to send back for those models who match the search"""
# Fetch the attributes from the request body (sent in ajax data)
search_input = request.GET.get('search_input')
# Get some data that we want to render to the template
if search_input:
data = MyModel.objects.filter(name__contains=search_input) # Example
else:
data = []
# Creating an html string using template and some data
html_response = render_to_string('path/to/creation_template.html', context = {'models': data})
return HttpResponse(html_response, status=200)
The html creation template for view
creation_template.html
{% for model in models %}
<li class="xyz">{{ model.name }}</li>
{% endfor %}
urls.py
urlpatterns = [
path('get-html/', views.create_some_html, name='get-html'),
]
The main template and ajax call
This is the template where we want to add the data to. In this example in particular we have a search input and a button that sends the search input's value to the view. The view then sends a HttpResponse back displaying data matching the search that we can render inside an element.
{% extends 'base.html' %}
{% load static %}
{% block content %}
<input id="search-input" placeholder="Type something..." value="">
<button id="add-html-button" class="btn btn-primary">Add Html</button>
<ul id="add-html-here">
<!-- This is where we want to render new html -->
</ul>
{% end block %}
{% block extra_js %}
<script>
// When button is pressed fetch inner html of ul
$("#add-html-button").on('click', function (e){
e.preventDefault();
let search_input = $('#search-input').val();
let target_element = $('#add-html-here');
$.ajax({
url: "{% url 'get-html' %}",
headers: {'X-CSRFToken': csrftoken},
data: {'search_input': search_input},
type: "GET",
dataType: 'html',
success: function (data) {
if (data) {
console.log(data);
// Add the http response to element
target_element.html(data);
}
}
});
})
</script>
{% endblock %}
I have tried to use AjaxableResponseMixin in my project, but had ended up with the following error message:
ImproperlyConfigured: No URL to redirect to. Either provide a url or define a get_absolute_url method on the Model.
That is because the CreateView will return a redirect response instead of returning a HttpResponse when you to send JSON request to the browser. So I have made some changes to the AjaxableResponseMixin. If the request is an ajax request, it will not call the super.form_valid method, just call the form.save() directly.
from django.http import JsonResponse
from django import forms
from django.db import models
class AjaxableResponseMixin(object):
success_return_code = 1
error_return_code = 0
"""
Mixin to add AJAX support to a form.
Must be used with an object-based FormView (e.g. CreateView)
"""
def form_invalid(self, form):
response = super(AjaxableResponseMixin, self).form_invalid(form)
if self.request.is_ajax():
form.errors.update({'result': self.error_return_code})
return JsonResponse(form.errors, status=400)
else:
return response
def form_valid(self, form):
# We make sure to call the parent's form_valid() method because
# it might do some processing (in the case of CreateView, it will
# call form.save() for example).
if self.request.is_ajax():
self.object = form.save()
data = {
'result': self.success_return_code
}
return JsonResponse(data)
else:
response = super(AjaxableResponseMixin, self).form_valid(form)
return response
class Product(models.Model):
name = models.CharField('product name', max_length=255)
class ProductAddForm(forms.ModelForm):
'''
Product add form
'''
class Meta:
model = Product
exclude = ['id']
class PriceUnitAddView(AjaxableResponseMixin, CreateView):
'''
Product add view
'''
model = Product
form_class = ProductAddForm
When we use Django:
Server ===> Client(Browser)
Send a page
When you click button and send the form,
----------------------------
Server <=== Client(Browser)
Give data back. (data in form will be lost)
Server ===> Client(Browser)
Send a page after doing sth with these data
----------------------------
If you want to keep old data, you can do it without Ajax. (Page will be refreshed)
Server ===> Client(Browser)
Send a page
Server <=== Client(Browser)
Give data back. (data in form will be lost)
Server ===> Client(Browser)
1. Send a page after doing sth with data
2. Insert data into form and make it like before.
After these thing, server will send a html page to client. It means that server do more work, however, the way to work is same.
Or you can do with Ajax (Page will be not refreshed)
--------------------------
<Initialization>
Server ===> Client(Browser) [from URL1]
Give a page
--------------------------
<Communication>
Server <=== Client(Browser)
Give data struct back but not to refresh the page.
Server ===> Client(Browser) [from URL2]
Give a data struct(such as JSON)
---------------------------------
If you use Ajax, you must do these:
Initial a HTML page using URL1 (we usually initial page by Django template). And then server send client a html page.
Use Ajax to communicate with server using URL2. And then server send client a data struct.
Django is different from Ajax. The reason for this is as follows:
The thing return to client is different. The case of Django is HTML page. The case of Ajax is data struct. 
Django is good at creating something, but it only can create once, it cannot change anything. Django is like anime, consist of many picture. By contrast, Ajax is not good at creating sth but good at change sth in exist html page.
In my opinion, if you would like to use ajax everywhere. when you need to initial a page with data at first, you can use Django with Ajax. But in some case, you just need a static page without anything from server, you need not use Django template.
If you don't think Ajax is the best practice. you can use Django template to do everything, like anime.
(My English is not good)

Find Floor Of Opensea NFT

Is there a way to get the floor price thats displayed on the main page of an NFT collection?
Here you see the floor price is 5.75 but if I query the contract using the Opensea api:
url = "https://api.opensea.io/api/v1/asset/0x1cb1a5e65610aeff2551a50f76a87a7d3fb649c6/1/"
response = requests.request("GET", url)
print(response.text)
I get a floor of:
So it seems as though the api is a little off. Was just curious if anyone here knows of a better way to get a more accurate floor price?
I have no idea why this works, but...
https://api.opensea.io/collection/${slug}
slug = the collection slug (name in URL).
For reference, I found this in some random other library's documentation... But it seems to work
Floor price is for collections (contracts). Opensea api does have a collections endpoint but it can't filter by anything except owner address. So you have to know the address of someone why owns a token I guess, which seems pretty retarded.
Also you can get the owner of a token from the assets endpoint which can filter by contract address and token id.
In case anyone was still looking, it looks like OpenSea added a new endpoint that more accurately tracks floor price:
https://docs.opensea.io/reference/retrieving-collection-stats
In the documentation it shows how the API works
https://api.opensea.io/api/v1/collection/doodles-official/stats
This returns all the stats. So change the name of the collection to the one you want and that's it.
I've managed to make it work by fetching different data from my collection on OpenSea and showing them on my website.
app.js:
function fetchData() {
// Using the OpenSea API's direct URL of the .json file from the collection
// Change the "OpenSeaCollectionNameSlug" in the URL to your collection's slug
fetch('https://api.opensea.io/api/v1/collection/OpenSeaCollectionNameSlug/stats?format=json')
.then(response => {
// If the data doesn't load properly from the URL, show a custom error message on the HTML file
if (!response.ok) {
throw Error('X');
}
return response.json();
})
.then(data => {
// Creating one or more const to put data inside
const floorprice = data.stats.floor_price
const owners = data.stats.num_owners
// Using id inside different span to add the content on the HTML file
// Using toFixed and toPrecision to round the output
document.querySelector('#floorprice').innerHTML = (floorprice).toFixed(3);
document.querySelector('#owners').innerHTML = Math.round(owners).toPrecision(2) / 1000;
// Keeping this console.log to see which other data stats can be fetched
console.log(data.stats);
});
}
fetchData();
index.html:
<div>
<h1>OWNERS</h1>
<h3><span id="owners"></span></h3>
</div>
<div>
<h1>FLOOR PRICE</h1>
<h3><span id="floorprice"></span> Ξ</h3>
</div>

angular2 serving local JSON file via http.get while having custom routing rules

I am very new to Angular and running into an issue while trying to get a local .json file via http.get. This is due to my routing rules but I'm not sure how to fix it.
Directory Structure:
api
mockAppointments.json
app
app.component.*
scheduler
scheduler.component.*
scheduler.component.ts where http.get() call is made:
getAppointments() {
return this.http
.get('api/mockAppointments.json')
.map((response : Response) => <Appointment[]>response.json().data)
.catch(this.handleError);
}
Routing rules:
const appRoutes: Routes = [
{
path: 'scheduler',
component: SchedulerComponent
},
{
path: '',
redirectTo: '/scheduler',
pathMatch: 'full'
}
];
As I browse to http://localhost:4200/scheduler, the page loads as expected but dev console has the error:
GET http://localhost:4200/api/mockAppointments.json 404 (Not Found)
When I try to get to that URL by typing it in the browser, I see the following in dev console:
ERROR Error: Uncaught (in promise): Error: Cannot match any routes. URL
Segment: 'api/mockAppointments.json'
So it's clear that the issue is with routing. For now I need all URLs redirected to /scheduler (which is happening). When I make a http.get('api/mockAppointments.json') call, it should just serve that as is, almost like a pass through. Everything I have looked at, I would need a component to go along with any routing rule. That is fine, but there wouldn't be a template associated with it.
I have tried putting the api folder under assets but it made no difference.
Eventually the api call would be external to the app so this wouldn't be an issue but how do I get it working during development?
TLDR: Is it possible to have a 'pass through' route which serves a JSON file as is via http.get() ?
copy your api folder into assets folder. Angular can only access files from assets folder.
getAppointments() {
return this.http
.get('assets/api/mockAppointments.json')
.map((response : Response) => <Appointment[]>response.json().data)
.catch(this.handleError);
}

Setting Http Status Code and customized status message and returning JSON output using Jersey in RESTful Service

I have implemented a RESTful service using Jersey. I am able to return the desired output in JSON format. But, I also need to set Http Status Code and my customized status message. Status code and status message should not be part of the JSON output.
I tried following links:
JAX/Jersey Custom error code in Response
JAX-RS — How to return JSON and HTTP status code together?
Custom HTTP status response with JAX-RS (Jersey) and #RolesAllowed
but I am able to perform only one of the tasks, either returning JSON or setting HTTP status code and message.
I have code something like below:
import javax.ws.rs.core.Response;
public class MyClass(){
#GET
#Produces( { MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON })
public MyObject retrieveUserDetails()
{
MyObject obj = new MyObject();
//Code for retrieving user details.
obj.add(userDetails);
Response.status(Status.NO_CONTENT).entity("The User does not exist").build();
return obj;
}
}
Can anyone provide solution to this?
the mistakes are :
1. if status is set to NO_content (HTTP204) the norm is to have an entity empty. so entity will be returned as empty to your client. This is not what you want to do in all case, if found return details, if not found return 404.
2.Produces( { MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON }) tells that you will return a json content, and the content of entity is not a json. You will have to return a json. You will see I use jackson as it's part of Jersey.
set a #Path("/user") to set a endpoint path at least at Resource level.
Need to set a path in order to adress your resource (endpoint)
use a bean in order to pass multiple things. I've made an example bean for you.
as improvement caution with HTTP return, use the proper one
404 :not found resource
204 : empty....
take a look at the norm: http://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_HTTP_status_codes
Take a look the complete code in Gist: https://gist.github.com/jeorfevre/260067c5b265f65f93b3
Enjoy :)

Play 2.0 routes file for different configurations

I have a Play 2.0 application with 3 different configurations (application.conf, test.conf and prod.conf)
Now I have a robots.txt file that should be delivered for only test.conf and for the rest environments it should give a 404 if someone tries to access it.
How can I configure my routes file to check if my application is using test.conf? Can I set some variable in test.conf that I can check in the routes file?
Something like this? (pseudo code)
#{if environment = "test"}
GET /robots.txt controllers.Assets.at(path="/public", file="robots.txt")
#{/if}
#{else}
GET /robots.txt controllers.Application.notFoundResult()
#{/else}
You can't add logic in the routes file.
I'd write a controller to serve the robots.txt file. Something like this:
In the routes file:
GET /robots.txt controllers.Application.robots
Then, in the controller, I'll test if I'm in a testing environment :
def robots = Action {
if (environment == "test") { // customize with your method
Redirect(routes.Assets.at("robots.txt"))
} else {
NotFound("")
}
}
I'm using Scala, but it can be easily translated to Java.
Edit - java sample
You can check if application is in one of three states: prod, dev or test, ie, simple method returning current state:
private static String getCurrentMode() {
if (play.Play.isTest()) return "test";
if (play.Play.isDev()) return "dev";
if (play.Play.isProd()) return "prod";
return "unknown";
}
you can use as:
play.Logger.debug("Current mode: "+ getCurrentMode());
of course in your case that's enough to use these condition directly:
public static Result robots() {
return (play.Play.isProd())
? notFound()
: ok("User-agent: *\nDisallow: /");
}