I have this code:
public void foo (){
String script =
"var aLocation = {};" +
"var aOffer = {};" +
"var aAdData = " +
"{ " +
"location: aLocation, " +
"offer: aOffer " +
" };" +
"var aClientEnv = " +
" { " +
" sessionid: \"\", " +
" cookie: \"\", " +
" rtserver-id: 1, " +
" lon: 34.847, " +
" lat: 32.123, " +
" venue: \"\", " +
" venue_context: \"\", " +
" source: \"\"," + // One of the following (string) values: ADS_PIN_INFO,
// ADS_0SPEED_INFO, ADS_LINE_SEARCH_INFO,
// ADS_ARROW_NEARBY_INFO, ADS_CATEGORY_AUTOCOMPLETE_INFO,
// ADS_HISTORY_LIST_INFO
// (this field is also called "channel")
" locale: \"\"" + // ISO639-1 language code (2-5 characters), supported formats:
" };" +
"W.setOffer(aAdData, aClientEnv);";
javascriptExecutor.executeScript(script);
}
I have two q:
script
value I see a member rtserver - id
instead of rtserver-id
how can it be? the code throws an exception because of this.Even if i remove this rtserver-id
member (and there is not exception thrown)
I evaluate aLocation
in this browser console and get "variable not defined"
. How can this be?
rtserver-id
isn't a valid identifier - so if you want it as a field/property name, you need to quote it. You can see this in a Chrome Javascript console, with no need for any Java involved:
> var aClientEnv = { sessionId: "", rtserver-id: 1 };
Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token -
> var aClientEnv = { sessionId: "", "rtserver-id": 1 };
undefined
> aClientEnv
Object {sessionId: "", rtserver-id: 1}
Basically I don't think anything's adding spaces - you've just got an invalid script. You can easily add the quotes in your Java code:
" \"rtserver-id\": 1, " +
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