Client-Side Code:
This is an ajax call to a .Net MVC Controller:
var clientStuff;
$.ajax({
type: 'GET',
url: '@Url.Action("GetStuff", "ControllerName")',
data: {},
dataType: "json",
cache: false,
async: false,
success: function (data) {
clientStuff = data;
},
error: function(errorMsg) {
alert(errorMsg);
}
});
Server-Side Code:
CONTROLLER:
public JsonResult GetStuff()
{
return Json(_manager.GetStuff(), JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);
}
MANAGER:
public IEnumerable<StuffViewModel> GetStuff()
{
return _unitofWork.GetStuff();
}
UNIT OF WORK:
public IEnumerable<StuffViewModel> GetStuff()
{
var ds = context.Database.SqlQuery<StuffViewModel>("[dbo].[GetStuff]");
return ds;
}
Unit of Work can be a query to a sproc (as I have done), a repository context, linq, etc.
I'm just calling a sproc here for simplicity, although it could be argued that the simplicity lies with Entity Framework and Linq.