Use the onReadyStateChange Property (Visual Basic)
This topic discusses the implementation details necessary to use onreadystatechange
notification in Microsoft Visual Basic applications.
Background Information for onReadyStateChange events
The onreadystatechange
callback function was not implemented as a COM automation event in the IXMLHTTPRequest
and IServerXMLHTTPRequest
components. This is because these components are heavily used in scripting environments, many of which do not support COM events. The onreadystatechange
callback function was intended to be easy to use when working with scripting clients such as VBScript and JScript.
Because the onreadystatechange
property was not implemented through COM-based automation events, Visual Basic (and C/C++) applications need to implement this callback functionality differently.
Using onReadyStateChange in Visual Basic applications
In Visual Basic, you can use any of the following approaches to design applications that support onreadystatechange
events.
Use a timer control to poll the
readyState
property. When the value of thereadyState
property indicates that the data is ready, turn the timer off.Use a
DomDocument
object to load the XML and handle the state using theWithEvents
keyword.Note
If you are using the
IXMLHTTPRequest
andIServerXMLHTTPRequest
components to first post your XML data to a Web server, this option will not work for you.Create a wrapper class, and create a procedure to handle the event within the class module. Set the procedure to the default, and bind the class to the
onreadystatechange
event to either theIXMLHTTPRequest
orIServerXMLHTTPRequest
component, depending on which component you are using with your application.
The following sample application demonstrates each of these three approaches.
To use OnReadyStateChange in a Visual Basic application
Open Microsoft® Visual Basic® 6.0. In the New Project dialog box, double-click Standard EXE.
On the Project menu, click References.
In the Available References list, select Microsoft XML,v6.0, and then click OK.
Add four command buttons to Form1 and set the caption of each button as follows:
Control Caption Command1 Fail Command2 Polling using Timer Command3 Using Class Wrapper Command4 Using DOMDocument Add a timer control to Form1.
Copy and paste the following code into Form1.
Option Explicit Public XMLHttpRequest As MSXML2.XMLHTTP60 Public WithEvents XMLDom As MSXML2.DOMDocument30 Private Function FunctionReadyStateChange() Debug.Print XMLHttpRequest.readyState End Function Private Sub Command1_Click() FailedOnReadyState End Sub Private Sub Command2_Click() TimerResolution End Sub Private Sub Command3_Click() ClassResolution End Sub Private Sub Command4_Click() DOMResolution End Sub Private Sub FailedOnReadyState() On Error GoTo FailedState If Not XMLHttpRequest Is Nothing Then Set XMLHttpRequest = Nothing Set XMLHttpRequest = New MSXML2.XMLHTTP60 ' Assign the wrapper class object to onreadystatechange. XMLHttpRequest.OnReadyStateChange = FunctionReadyStateChange ' Get some stuff asynchronously. XMLHttpRequest.open "GET", "https://localhost/test.xml", True XMLHttpRequest.send Exit Sub FailedState: MsgBox Err.Number & ": " & Err.Description End Sub Private Sub TimerResolution() If Not XMLHttpRequest Is Nothing Then Set XMLHttpRequest = Nothing Timer1.Interval = 1 Set XMLHttpRequest = New MSXML2.XMLHTTP60 ' Get some stuff asynchronously. XMLHttpRequest.open "GET", "https://localhost/test.xml", True XMLHttpRequest.send End Sub Private Sub ClassResolution() If Not XMLHttpRequest Is Nothing Then Set XMLHttpRequest = Nothing Dim MyOnReadyStateWrapper As MyReadyStateHandler Set XMLHttpRequest = New MSXML2.XMLHTTP60 ' Create an instance of the wrapper class. Set MyOnReadyStateWrapper = New MyReadyStateHandler ' Assign the wrapper class object to onreadystatechange. XMLHttpRequest.OnReadyStateChange = MyOnReadyStateWrapper ' Get some stuff asynchronously. XMLHttpRequest.open "GET", "https://localhost/test.xml", True XMLHttpRequest.send End Sub Private Sub DOMResolution() If Not XMLHttpRequest Is Nothing Then Set XMLHttpRequest = Nothing If Not XMLDom Is Nothing Then Set XMLDom = Nothing Set XMLDom = New MSXML2.DOMDocument30 XMLDom.async = True XMLDom.Load "https://localhost/test.xml" End Sub Private Sub Timer1_Timer() Debug.Print XMLHttpRequest.readyState If XMLHttpRequest.readyState = 4 Then MsgBox "Done" Timer1.Interval = 0 End If End Sub Private Sub XMLDom_onreadystatechange() Debug.Print XMLDom.readyState If XMLDom.readyState = 4 Then MsgBox "Done" End If End Sub
From the Project menu, click Add Class Module.
Change the name of the new class module from "Class1" to "MyReadyStateHandler"
Paste the following code into the class module:
Option Explicit Sub OnReadyStateChange() Debug.Print Form1.XMLHttpRequest.readyState If Form1.XMLHttpRequest.readyState = 4 Then MsgBox "Done" End If End Sub
In the sample code added in the previous step, highlight the procedure name "OnReadyStateChange" by selecting it in the Code window.
From the Tools menu, click Procedure Attributes.
In the Procedure Attributes dialog, the Name combo box should show "OnReadyStateChange."
Click Advanced.
In Procedure ID, select "(Default)" from the available options.
Click OK.
Save the class module (MyReadyStateHandler.cls) to file.
Open Notepad and paste the following XML into it
<?xml version="1.0"?> <Root> <Testing>This is to test the onreadystatechange event on the XMLHTTPRequest or DOMDocument</Testing> <Testing>This is due to the event not being declared in the type library</Testing> </Root>
Save the file as test.xml to your IIS localhost directory. For example, this folder might be C:\Inetpub\wwwroot for a typical default installation of IIS with Windows 2000.
In Visual Basic, from the Run menu, click Start to run the application.
Try the following command options to observe the different approaches to using the
onreadystatechange
event within Visual Basic.To force a ready state failure, click Fail.
To view the polling resolution, click Polling using Timer.
To view the wrapper class solution, click Using Class Wrapper.
To view the
DOMDocument
approach, click Using DomDocument.
For each of the code paths in the previous step, you can place brake-points at various places to step through the code.
Remarks
For step 19a, the following error message should appear indicating the failure:
424: Object required
For steps 19b, 19c and 19d, return values for onreadystatechange
should appear in the Visual Basic debug window while the document loads. When the document completes loading, a message box saying "Done" should appear.