'select', * '#options' => array( * 'one' => 'one', * 'two' => 'two', * 'three' => 'three', * ), * '#ajax' => array( * 'callback' => 'ajax_example_simplest_callback', * 'wrapper' => 'replace_textfield_div', * ), * ); * // This entire form element will be replaced with an updated value. * $form['replace_textfield'] = array( * '#type' => 'textfield', * '#title' => t("The default value will be changed"), * '#description' => t("Say something about why you chose") . "'" . * (!empty($form_state['values']['changethis']) * ? $form_state['values']['changethis'] : t("Not changed yet")) . "'", * '#prefix' => '
', * '#suffix' => '
', * ); * return $form; * } * * function ajax_example_simplest_callback($form, $form_state) { * // The form has already been submitted and updated. We can return the replaced * // item as it is. * return $form['replace_textfield']; * } * @endcode * * In the above example, the 'changethis' element is AJAX-enabled. The default * #ajax['event'] is 'change', so when the 'changethis' element changes, * an AJAX call is made. The form is submitted and reprocessed, and then the * callback is called. In this case, the form has been automatically * built changing $form['replace_textfield']['#description'], so the callback * just returns that part of the form. * * To implement AJAX handling in a form, add '#ajax' to the form * definition of a field. That field will trigger an AJAX event when it is * clicked (or changed, depending on the kind of field). #ajax supports * the following parameters (either 'path' or 'callback' is required at least): * - #ajax['callback']: The callback to invoke to handle the server side of the * AJAX event, which will receive a $form and $form_state as arguments, and * returns a renderable array (most often a form or form fragment), an HTML * string, or an array of AJAX commands. If returning a renderable array or * a string, the value will replace the original element named in * #ajax['wrapper'], and * theme_status_messages() * will be prepended to that * element. (If the status messages are not wanted, return an array * of AJAX commands instead.) * #ajax['wrapper']. If an array of AJAX commands is returned, it will be * executed by the calling code. * - #ajax['path']: The menu path to use for the request. This is often omitted * and the default is used. This path should map * to a menu page callback that returns data using ajax_render(). Defaults to * 'system/ajax', which invokes ajax_form_callback(), eventually calling * the function named in #ajax['callback']. If you use a custom * path, you must set up the menu entry and handle the entire callback in your * own code. * - #ajax['wrapper']: The CSS ID of the area to be replaced by the content * returned by the #ajax['callback'] function. The content returned from * the callback will replace the entire element named by #ajax['wrapper']. * The wrapper is usually created using #prefix and #suffix properties in the * form. Note that this is the wrapper ID, not a CSS selector. So to replace * the element referred to by the CSS selector #some-selector on the page, * use #ajax['wrapper'] = 'some-selector', not '#some-selector'. * - #ajax['effect']: The jQuery effect to use when placing the new HTML. * Defaults to no effect. Valid options are 'none', 'slide', or 'fade'. * - #ajax['speed']: The effect speed to use. Defaults to 'slow'. May be * 'slow', 'fast' or a number in milliseconds which represents the length * of time the effect should run. * - #ajax['event']: The JavaScript event to respond to. This is normally * selected automatically for the type of form widget being used, and * is only needed if you need to override the default behavior. * - #ajax['method']: The jQuery method to use to place the new HTML. * Defaults to 'replace'. May be: 'replace', 'append', 'prepend', * 'before', 'after', or 'html'. See the jQuery documentation for more * information on these methods. * - #ajax['progress']: Choose either a throbber or progress bar that is * displayed while awaiting a response from the callback, and add an optional * message. Possible keys: 'type', 'message', 'url', 'interval'. * More information is available in the * @link http://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/developer--topics--forms_api_reference.html/7 Form API Reference @endlink * * In addition to using Form API for doing in-form modification, AJAX may be * enabled by adding classes to buttons and links. By adding the 'use-ajax' * class to a link, the link will be loaded via an AJAX call. When using this * method, the href of the link can contain '/nojs/' as part of the path. When * the AJAX framework makes the request, it will convert this to '/ajax/'. * The server is then able to easily tell if this request was made through an * actual AJAX request or in a degraded state, and respond appropriately. * * Similarly, submit buttons can be given the class 'use-ajax-submit'. The * form will then be submitted via AJAX to the path specified in the #action. * Like the ajax-submit class above, this path will have '/nojs/' replaced with * '/ajax/' so that the submit handler can tell if the form was submitted * in a degraded state or not. * * When responding to AJAX requests, the server should do what it needs to do * for that request, then create a commands array. This commands array will * be converted to a JSON object and returned to the client, which will then * iterate over the array and process it like a macro language. * * Each command item is an associative array which will be converted to a command * object on the JavaScript side. $command_item['command'] is the type of * command, e.g. 'alert' or 'replace', and will correspond to a method in the * Drupal.ajax[command] space. The command array may contain any other data * that the command needs to process, e.g. 'method', 'selector', 'settings', etc. * * Commands are usually created with a couple of helper functions, so they * look like this: * @code * $commands = array(); * // Replace the content of '#object-1' on the page with 'some html here'. * $commands[] = ajax_command_replace('#object-1', 'some html here'); * // Add a visual "changed" marker to the '#object-1' element. * $commands[] = ajax_command_changed('#object-1'); * // Menu 'page callback' and #ajax['callback'] functions are supposed to * // return render arrays. If returning an AJAX commands array, it must be * // encapsulated in a render array structure. * return array('#type' => 'ajax', '#commands' => $commands); * @endcode * * When returning an AJAX command array, it is often useful to have * status messages rendered along with other tasks in the command array. * In that case the the AJAX commands array may be constructed like this: * @code * $commands = array(); * $commands[] = ajax_command_replace(NULL, $output); * $commands[] = ajax_command_prepend(NULL, theme('status_messages')); * return array('#type' => 'ajax', '#commands' => $commands); * @endcode * * See @link ajax_commands AJAX framework commands @endlink */ /** * Render a commands array into JSON. * * @param $commands * A list of macro commands generated by the use of ajax_command_*() * functions. */ function ajax_render($commands = array()) { // Automatically extract any 'settings' added via drupal_add_js() and make // them the first command. $scripts = drupal_add_js(NULL, NULL); if (!empty($scripts['settings'])) { array_unshift($commands, ajax_command_settings(call_user_func_array('array_merge_recursive', $scripts['settings']['data']))); } // Allow modules to alter any AJAX response. drupal_alter('ajax_render', $commands); return drupal_json_encode($commands); } /** * Get a form submitted via #ajax during an AJAX callback. * * This will load a form from the form cache used during AJAX operations. It * pulls the form info from $_POST. * * @return * An array containing the $form and $form_state. Use the list() function * to break these apart: * @code * list($form, $form_state, $form_id, $form_build_id) = ajax_get_form(); * @endcode */ function ajax_get_form() { $form_state = form_state_defaults(); $form_build_id = $_POST['form_build_id']; // Get the form from the cache. $form = form_get_cache($form_build_id, $form_state); if (!$form) { // If $form cannot be loaded from the cache, the form_build_id in $_POST // must be invalid, which means that someone performed a POST request onto // system/ajax without actually viewing the concerned form in the browser. // This is likely a hacking attempt as it never happens under normal // circumstances, so we just do nothing. watchdog('ajax', 'Invalid form POST data.', array(), WATCHDOG_WARNING); drupal_exit(); } // Since some of the submit handlers are run, redirects need to be disabled. $form_state['no_redirect'] = TRUE; // The form needs to be processed; prepare for that by setting a few internal // variables. $form_state['input'] = $_POST; $form_id = $form['#form_id']; return array($form, $form_state, $form_id, $form_build_id); } /** * Menu callback; handles AJAX requests for the #ajax Form API property. * * This rebuilds the form from cache and invokes the defined #ajax['callback'] * to return an AJAX command structure for JavaScript. In case no 'callback' has * been defined, nothing will happen. * * The Form API #ajax property can be set both for buttons and other input * elements. * * This function is also the canonical example of how to implement * #ajax['path']. If processing is required that cannot be accomplished with * a callback, re-implement this function and set #ajax['path'] to the * enhanced function. */ function ajax_form_callback() { list($form, $form_state, $form_id, $form_build_id) = ajax_get_form(); // Build, validate and if possible, submit the form. drupal_process_form($form_id, $form, $form_state); // This call recreates the form relying solely on the $form_state that // drupal_process_form() set up. $form = drupal_rebuild_form($form_id, $form_state, $form); // As part of drupal_process_form(), the element that triggered the form // submission is determined, and in the case of AJAX, it might not be a // button. This lets us route to the appropriate callback. if (!empty($form_state['triggering_element'])) { $callback = $form_state['triggering_element']['#ajax']['callback']; } if (!empty($callback) && function_exists($callback)) { return $callback($form, $form_state); } } /** * Package and send the result of a page callback to the browser as an AJAX response. * * @param $page_callback_result * The result of a page callback. Can be one of: * - NULL: to indicate no content. * - An integer menu status constant: to indicate an error condition. * - A string of HTML content. * - A renderable array of content. */ function ajax_deliver($page_callback_result) { $commands = array(); $header = TRUE; // Normalize whatever was returned by the page callback to an AJAX commands // array. if (!isset($page_callback_result)) { // Simply delivering an empty commands array is sufficient. This results // in the AJAX request being completed, but nothing being done to the page. } elseif (is_int($page_callback_result)) { switch ($page_callback_result) { case MENU_NOT_FOUND: $commands[] = ajax_command_alert(t('The requested page could not be found.')); break; case MENU_ACCESS_DENIED: $commands[] = ajax_command_alert(t('You are not authorized to access this page.')); break; case MENU_SITE_OFFLINE: $commands[] = ajax_command_alert(filter_xss_admin(variable_get('maintenance_mode_message', t('@site is currently under maintenance. We should be back shortly. Thank you for your patience.', array('@site' => variable_get('site_name', 'Drupal')))))); break; } } elseif (is_array($page_callback_result) && isset($page_callback_result['#type']) && ($page_callback_result['#type'] == 'ajax')) { // Complex AJAX callbacks can return a result that contains an error message // or a specific set of commands to send to the browser. $page_callback_result += element_info('ajax'); $header = $page_callback_result['#header']; $error = $page_callback_result['#error']; if (isset($error) && $error !== FALSE) { if ((empty($error) || $error === TRUE)) { $error = t('An error occurred while handling the request: The server received invalid input.'); } $commands[] = ajax_command_alert($error); } else { $commands = $page_callback_result['#commands']; } } else { // Like normal page callbacks, simple AJAX callbacks can return html // content, as a string or renderable array, to replace what was previously // there in the wrapper. In this case, in addition to the content, we want // to add the status messages, but inside the new wrapper, so that they get // replaced on subsequent AJAX calls for the same wrapper. $html = is_string($page_callback_result) ? $page_callback_result : drupal_render($page_callback_result); $commands[] = ajax_command_replace(NULL, $html); $commands[] = ajax_command_prepend(NULL, theme('status_messages')); } // This function needs to do the same thing that drupal_deliver_html_page() // does: add any needed http headers, print rendered output, and perform // end-of-request tasks. By default, $header=TRUE, and we add a // 'text/javascript' header. The page callback can override $header by // returning an 'ajax' element with a #header property. This can be set to // FALSE to prevent the 'text/javascript' header from being output, necessary // when outputting to an IFRAME. This can also be set to 'multipart', in which // case, we don't output JSON, but JSON content wrapped in a textarea, making // a 'text/javascript' header incorrect. if ($header && $header !== 'multipart') { drupal_add_http_header('Content-Type', 'text/javascript; charset=utf-8'); } $output = ajax_render($commands); if ($header === 'multipart') { // jQuery file uploads: http://malsup.com/jquery/form/#code-samples $output = ''; } print $output; ajax_footer(); } /** * Perform end-of-AJAX-request tasks. * * This function is the equivalent of drupal_page_footer(), but for AJAX * requests. * * @see drupal_page_footer() */ function ajax_footer() { // Even for AJAX requests, invoke hook_exit() implementations. There may be // modules that need very fast AJAX responses, and therefore, run AJAX // requests with an early bootstrap. if (drupal_get_bootstrap_phase() == DRUPAL_BOOTSTRAP_FULL && (!defined('MAINTENANCE_MODE') || MAINTENANCE_MODE != 'update')) { module_invoke_all('exit'); } // Commit the user session. See above comment about the possibility of this // function running without session.inc loaded. if (function_exists('drupal_session_commit')) { drupal_session_commit(); } } /** * Add AJAX information about a form element to the page to communicate with JavaScript. * * If #ajax['path'] is set on an element, this additional JavaScript is added * to the page header to attach the AJAX behaviors. See ajax.js for more * information. * * @param $element * An associative array containing the properties of the element. * Properties used: * - #ajax['event'] * - #ajax['path'] * - #ajax['wrapper'] * - #ajax['parameters'] * - #ajax['effect'] * * @return * None. Additional code is added to the header of the page using * drupal_add_js(). */ function ajax_process_form($element, &$form_state) { // Nothing to do if there is neither a callback nor a path. if (!(isset($element['#ajax']['callback']) || isset($element['#ajax']['path']))) { return $element; } // Add a reasonable default event handler if none was specified. if (isset($element['#ajax']) && !isset($element['#ajax']['event'])) { switch ($element['#type']) { case 'submit': case 'button': case 'image_button': // Use the mousedown instead of the click event because form // submission via pressing the enter key triggers a click event on // submit inputs, inappropriately triggering AJAX behaviors. $element['#ajax']['event'] = 'mousedown'; // Attach an additional event handler so that AJAX behaviors // can be triggered still via keyboard input. $element['#ajax']['keypress'] = TRUE; break; case 'password': case 'textfield': case 'textarea': $element['#ajax']['event'] = 'blur'; break; case 'radio': case 'checkbox': case 'select': $element['#ajax']['event'] = 'change'; break; default: return $element; } } // Attach JavaScript settings to the element. if (isset($element['#ajax']['event'])) { $element['#attached']['library'][] = array('system', 'form'); $element['#attached']['js']['misc/ajax.js'] = array('weight' => JS_LIBRARY + 2); $settings = $element['#ajax']; // Assign default settings. $settings += array( 'selector' => '#' . $element['#id'], 'effect' => 'none', 'speed' => 'none', 'method' => 'replace', 'progress' => array('type' => 'throbber'), ); // Change path to url. $settings['url'] = isset($settings['path']) ? url($settings['path']) : url('system/ajax'); unset($settings['path']); // Add special data to $settings['submit'] so that when this element // triggers an AJAX submission, Drupal's form processing can determine which // element triggered it. // @see _form_element_triggered_scripted_submission() if (isset($settings['trigger_as'])) { // An element can add a 'trigger_as' key within #ajax to make the element // submit as though another one (for example, a non-button can use this // to submit the form as though a button were clicked). When using this, // the 'name' key is always required to identify the element to trigger // as. The 'value' key is optional, and only needed when multiple elements // share the same name, which is commonly the case for buttons. $settings['submit']['_triggering_element_name'] = $settings['trigger_as']['name']; if (isset($settings['trigger_as']['value'])) { $settings['submit']['_triggering_element_value'] = $settings['trigger_as']['value']; } unset($settings['trigger_as']); } else { // Most of the time, elements can submit as themselves, in which case the // 'trigger_as' key isn't needed, and the element's name is used. $settings['submit']['_triggering_element_name'] = $element['#name']; // If the element is a (non-image) button, its name may not identify it // uniquely, in which case a match on value is also needed. // @see _form_button_was_clicked() if (isset($element['#button_type']) && empty($element['#has_garbage_value'])) { $settings['submit']['_triggering_element_value'] = $element['#value']; } } // Convert a simple #ajax['progress'] string into an array. if (is_string($settings['progress'])) { $settings['progress'] = array('type' => $settings['progress']); } // Change progress path to a full URL. if (isset($settings['progress']['path'])) { $settings['progress']['url'] = url($settings['progress']['path']); unset($settings['progress']['path']); } // Add progress.js if we're doing a bar display. if ($settings['progress']['type'] == 'bar') { $element['#attached']['js']['misc/progress.js'] = array('cache' => FALSE); } $element['#attached']['js'][] = array( 'type' => 'setting', 'data' => array('ajax' => array($element['#id'] => $settings)), ); $form_state['cache'] = TRUE; } return $element; } /** * @} End of "defgroup ajax". */ /** * @defgroup ajax_commands AJAX framework commands * @{ */ /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'alert' command. * * The 'alert' command instructs the client to display a JavaScript alert * dialog box. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.alert() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $text * The message string to display to the user. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. */ function ajax_command_alert($text) { return array( 'command' => 'alert', 'text' => $text, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'insert/replaceWith' command. * * The 'insert/replaceWith' command instructs the client to use jQuery's * replaceWith() method to replace each element matched matched by the given * selector with the given HTML. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.insert() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $html * The data to use with the jQuery replaceWith() method. * @param $settings * An optional array of settings that will be used for this command only. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/Manipulation/replaceWith#content */ function ajax_command_replace($selector, $html, $settings = NULL) { return array( 'command' => 'insert', 'method' => 'replaceWith', 'selector' => $selector, 'data' => $html, 'settings' => $settings, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'insert/html' command. * * The 'insert/html' command instructs the client to use jQuery's html() * method to set the HTML content of each element matched by the given * selector while leaving the outer tags intact. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.insert() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $html * The data to use with the jQuery html() method. * @param $settings * An optional array of settings that will be used for this command only. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/Attributes/html#val */ function ajax_command_html($selector, $html, $settings = NULL) { return array( 'command' => 'insert', 'method' => 'html', 'selector' => $selector, 'data' => $html, 'settings' => $settings, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'insert/prepend' command. * * The 'insert/prepend' command instructs the client to use jQuery's prepend() * method to prepend the given HTML content to the inside each element matched * by the given selector. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.insert() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $html * The data to use with the jQuery prepend() method. * @param $settings * An optional array of settings that will be used for this command only. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/Manipulation/prepend#content */ function ajax_command_prepend($selector, $html, $settings = NULL) { return array( 'command' => 'insert', 'method' => 'prepend', 'selector' => $selector, 'data' => $html, 'settings' => $settings, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'insert/append' command. * * The 'insert/append' command instructs the client to use jQuery's append() * method to append the given HTML content to the inside each element matched * by the given selector. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.insert() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $html * The data to use with the jQuery append() method. * @param $settings * An optional array of settings that will be used for this command only. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/Manipulation/append#content */ function ajax_command_append($selector, $html, $settings = NULL) { return array( 'command' => 'insert', 'method' => 'append', 'selector' => $selector, 'data' => $html, 'settings' => $settings, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'insert/after' command. * * The 'insert/after' command instructs the client to use jQuery's after() * method to insert the given HTML content after each element matched by * the given selector. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.insert() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $html * The data to use with the jQuery after() method. * @param $settings * An optional array of settings that will be used for this command only. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/Manipulation/after#content */ function ajax_command_after($selector, $html, $settings = NULL) { return array( 'command' => 'insert', 'method' => 'after', 'selector' => $selector, 'data' => $html, 'settings' => $settings, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'insert/before' command. * * The 'insert/before' command instructs the client to use jQuery's before() * method to insert the given HTML content before each of elements matched by * the given selector. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.insert() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $html * The data to use with the jQuery before() method. * @param $settings * An optional array of settings that will be used for this command only. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/Manipulation/before#content */ function ajax_command_before($selector, $html, $settings = NULL) { return array( 'command' => 'insert', 'method' => 'before', 'selector' => $selector, 'data' => $html, 'settings' => $settings, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'remove' command. * * The 'remove' command instructs the client to use jQuery's remove() method * to remove each of elements matched by the given selector, and everything * within them. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.remove() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/Manipulation/remove#expr */ function ajax_command_remove($selector) { return array( 'command' => 'remove', 'selector' => $selector, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'changed' command. * * This command instructs the client to mark each of the elements matched by the * given selector as 'ajax-changed'. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.changed() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $asterisk * An optional CSS selector which must be inside $selector. If specified, * an asterisk will be appended to the HTML inside the $asterisk selector. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. */ function ajax_command_changed($selector, $asterisk = '') { return array( 'command' => 'changed', 'selector' => $selector, 'asterisk' => $asterisk, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'css' command. * * The 'css' command will instruct the client to use the jQuery css() method * to apply the CSS arguments to elements matched by the given selector. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.insert() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $argument * An array of key/value pairs to set in the CSS for the selector. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/CSS/css#properties */ function ajax_command_css($selector, $argument) { return array( 'command' => 'css', 'selector' => $selector, 'argument' => $argument, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'settings' command. * * The 'settings' command instructs the client either to use the given array as * the settings for ajax-loaded content or to extend Drupal.settings with the * given array, depending on the value of the $merge parameter. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.settings() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $argument * An array of key/value pairs to add to the settings. This will be utilized * for all commands after this if they do not include their own settings * array. * @param $merge * Whether or not the passed settings in $argument should be merged into the * global Drupal.settings on the page. By default (FALSE), the settings that * are passed to Drupal.attachBehaviors will not include the global * Drupal.settings. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. */ function ajax_command_settings($argument, $merge = FALSE) { return array( 'command' => 'settings', 'settings' => $argument, 'merge' => $merge, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'data' command. * * The 'data' command instructs the client to attach the name=value pair of * data to the selector via jQuery's data cache. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.data() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. If the command is a response to a request from * an #ajax form element then this value can be NULL. * @param $name * The name or key (in the key value pair) of the data attached to this * selector. * @param $value * The value of the data. Not just limited to strings can be any format. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. * * @see http://docs.jquery.com/Core/data#namevalue */ function ajax_command_data($selector, $name, $value) { return array( 'command' => 'data', 'selector' => $selector, 'name' => $name, 'value' => $value, ); } /** * Creates a Drupal AJAX 'restripe' command. * * The 'restripe' command instructs the client to restripe a table. This is * usually used after a table has been modified by a replace or append command. * * This command is implemented by Drupal.ajax.prototype.commands.restripe() * defined in misc/ajax.js. * * @param $selector * A jQuery selector string. * * @return * An array suitable for use with the ajax_render() function. */ function ajax_command_restripe($selector) { return array( 'command' => 'restripe', 'selector' => $selector, ); }