Another interesting YQL feature: XML with callback (JSON-P-X)
Thursday, July 9th, 2009Yesterday’s announcement of YQL now supporting insert, update and delete somehow overshadowed another interesting new feature: XML with callback!
XML with callback?
On first glance having a callback parameter on an XML output doesn’t make any sense. The normal use case of callbacks is to turn JSON data into JSON-P so that you can use the data immediately in JavaScript. The reason for XML with callback is to make it easier to use the same data when getting data from the web. Say I want to use YQL to get the images and links of the people I follow from twitter. The YQL statement is:
select * from html where url=”http://twitter.com/codepo8”
and xpath = “//div[@id=’following_list’]”
The XML output of this call is a pretty hefty XML document with all the HTML as an XML node structure.
The JSON (and JSON-P output) is even worse as it gives you a structure of all the elements and their attributes as properties of nested objects:
div: {
id: “following_list”
span: [
{
a: {
href: “/jemimakiss”
hreflang: “en”
rel: “contact”
title: “Jemima Kiss”
img: {
alt: “Jemima Kiss”
height: “24”
src: “http://s3.amazonaws.c…glasto_mini.jpg”
width: “24”
}
}
}
//... and so on …
Converting this back into HTML could be quite an annoying job – not to say slow. This is why YQL now offers the callback parameter for XML. The JSONP-X output as it is called in the YQL changelog makes this task a lot easier by returning a JSON object with the XML as a string:
foo({
“query”:{
count“,
updated“,
“diagnostics”:{
publiclyCallable“,
“url”:{
execution-time“,
content”
},
user-time”
}
},
“results”:[
“
”
]
});
This makes it dead easy to render the results back as HTML:
Nice? I think so!