I'm generating a CSV from an MVC 3 website and using a FileContentResult to pass this to the user. This worked great but it took 30 seconds for the csv to generate and therefore 30 seconds before the prompt to save was given to the user.
public virtual FileContentResult GetSpreadsheet(string id)
{
var service = new SpreadsheetService();
var result = service.GetCSV();
return File(new System.Text.UTF8Encoding().GetBytes(result.Message), "text/csv", "Report123.csv");
}
So I thought I'd just call it via JQuery - but this (unsurprisingly!) just dumps the CSV to the page.
$.post("/Home/GetSpreadsheet/" + id, null, function (data) {
$('#resultDiv').html(data);
});
Does anyone know how I'd generate the prompt to save now I've got the data back? Thanks
You can't do that. Forget about that. It is impossible to download files using AJAX. In fact the AJAX call will work, you will hit the server, the server will send the file contents back to the client, the AJAX success callback will be triggered and passed as argument the contents of the file and that's where everything ends for you. Using javascript you cannot, for absolutely obvious reasons, save directly the file to the client computer and you cannot prompt for the Save As dialog.
So instead of using AJAX simply create an anchor:
@Html.ActionLink("download spreadsheet", "GetSpreadsheet", new { id = "123" })
Now if the server set the Content-Disposition
header to attachment
the browser will prompt the user to download and save the file at some chosen location on his computer.
If you don't want to use an anchor, use a hidden iframe and set the src of the iframe to the url of the file to be downloaded.
<iframe id="hiddenFrame" src="" style="display:none; visibility:hidden;"></iframe>
Instead of the '$.post(...)' line use:
downloadSpreadsheet('123');
function downloadSpreadsheet(id) {
var url = '@Url.Content("~/YourControllerName/GetSpreadsheet")' + "?id=" + id;
$('#hiddenFrame').attr('src', url);
}
Or you can give a try on the jQuery Plugin for Requesting Ajax-like File Downloads
Using the plugin, you can download by invocking:
jQuery.download(url, data, method)
You can use this in JavaScript:
function downloadSpreadsheet(id) {
window.location.href = '@Url.Action("GetSpreadsheet", "Home")?id=' + id;
}
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