I have the following JS method to bind the jQuery UI autocomplete widget to a search text box. Everything works fine, including caching, except that I make unnecessary server calls when appending my search term because I don’t reuse the just-retrieved results.
For example, searching for “ab” fetches some results from the server. Typing “c” after “ab” in the search box fetches “abc” results from the server, instead of reusing the cached “ab” results and omitting ones that don’t match “abc”.
I went down the path of manually looking up the “ab” search results, filtering them using a regex to select the “abc” subset, but this totally seems like I’m reinventing the wheel. What is the proper, canonical way to tell the widget to use the “ab” results, but filter them for the “abc” term and redisplay the shortened dropdown?
function bindSearchForm() {
"use strict";
var cache = new Object();
$('#search_text_field').autocomplete({
minLength: 2,
source: function (request, response) {
var term = request.term;
if (term in cache) {
response(cache[term]);
return;
}
$.ajax({type: 'POST',
dataType: 'json',
url: '/get_search_data',
data: {q: term},
success: function (data) {
cache[term] = data;
response(data);
}
});
});
}
Here’s my “brute-force, reinventing the wheel” method, which is, for now, looking like the right solution.