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Thursday, September 8, 2022

[FIXED] How do I post form data with fetch api?

 September 08, 2022     ajax, fetch-api, javascript     No comments   

Issue

My code:

fetch("api/xxx", {
    body: new FormData(document.getElementById("form")),
    headers: {
        "Content-Type": "application/x-www-form-urlencoded",
        // "Content-Type": "multipart/form-data",
    },
    method: "post",
}

I tried to post my form using fetch api, and the body it sends is like:

-----------------------------114782935826962
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="email"

test@example.com
-----------------------------114782935826962
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="password"

pw
-----------------------------114782935826962--

(I don't know why the number in boundary is changed every time it sends...)

I would like it to send the data with "Content-Type": "application/x-www-form-urlencoded", what should I do? Or if I just have to deal with it, how do I decode the data in my controller?


To whom answer my question, I know I can do it with:

fetch("api/xxx", {
    body: "email=test@example.com&password=pw",
    headers: {
        "Content-Type": "application/x-www-form-urlencoded",
    },
    method: "post",
}

What I want is something like $("#form").serialize() in jQuery (w/o using jQuery) or the way to decode mulitpart/form-data in controller. Thanks for your answers though.


Solution

To quote MDN on FormData (emphasis mine):

The FormData interface provides a way to easily construct a set of key/value pairs representing form fields and their values, which can then be easily sent using the XMLHttpRequest.send() method. It uses the same format a form would use if the encoding type were set to "multipart/form-data".

So when using FormData you are locking yourself into multipart/form-data. There is no way to send a FormData object as the body and not sending data in the multipart/form-data format.

If you want to send the data as application/x-www-form-urlencoded you will either have to specify the body as an URL-encoded string, or pass a URLSearchParams object. The latter unfortunately cannot be directly initialized from a form element. If you don’t want to iterate through your form elements yourself (which you could do using HTMLFormElement.elements), you could also create a URLSearchParams object from a FormData object:

const data = new URLSearchParams();
for (const pair of new FormData(formElement)) {
    data.append(pair[0], pair[1]);
}

fetch(url, {
    method: 'post',
    body: data,
})
.then(…);

Note that you do not need to specify a Content-Type header yourself.


As noted by monk-time in the comments, you can also create URLSearchParams and pass the FormData object directly, instead of appending the values in a loop:

const data = new URLSearchParams(new FormData(formElement));

This still has some experimental support in browsers though, so make sure to test this properly before you use it.



Answered By - poke
Answer Checked By - Cary Denson (PHPFixing Admin)
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