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Could anyone tell me why the following statement does not send the post data to the designated url? The url is called but on the server when I print $_POST - I get an empty array. If I print message in the console before adding it to the data - it shows the correct content.

$http.post('request-url',  { 'message' : message });

I've also tried it with the data as string (with the same outcome):

$http.post('request-url',  "message=" + message);

It seem to be working when I use it in the following format:

$http({
    method: 'POST',
    url: 'request-url',
    data: "message=" + message,
    headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}
});

but is there a way of doing it with the $http.post() - and do I always have to include the header in order for it to work? I believe that the above content type is specifying format of the sent data, but can I send it as javascript object?

share|improve this question
    
Is the url in the same origin? – fmquaglia Oct 9 '13 at 1:47
    
Sorry - yes for all examples it's the same url – Spencer Mark Oct 9 '13 at 7:26
    
@SpencerMark sorry.. i tried above your working code.. its not working for me. – Arul Sidthan Jun 17 '15 at 8:47

34 Answers 34

up vote 290 down vote accepted

I had the same problem using asp.net MVC and found the solution here

There is much confusion among newcomers to AngularJS as to why the $http service shorthand functions ($http.post(), etc.) don’t appear to be swappable with the jQuery equivalents (jQuery.post(), etc.)

The difference is in how jQuery and AngularJS serialize and transmit the data. Fundamentally, the problem lies with your server language of choice being unable to understand AngularJS’s transmission natively ... By default, jQuery transmits data using

Content-Type: x-www-form-urlencoded

and the familiar foo=bar&baz=moe serialization.

AngularJS, however, transmits data using

Content-Type: application/json 

and { "foo": "bar", "baz": "moe" }

JSON serialization, which unfortunately some Web server languages—notably PHP—do not unserialize natively.

Works like a charm.

CODE

// Your app's root module...
angular.module('MyModule', [], function($httpProvider) {
  // Use x-www-form-urlencoded Content-Type
  $httpProvider.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded;charset=utf-8';

  /**
   * The workhorse; converts an object to x-www-form-urlencoded serialization.
   * @param {Object} obj
   * @return {String}
   */ 
  var param = function(obj) {
    var query = '', name, value, fullSubName, subName, subValue, innerObj, i;

    for(name in obj) {
      value = obj[name];

      if(value instanceof Array) {
        for(i=0; i<value.length; ++i) {
          subValue = value[i];
          fullSubName = name + '[' + i + ']';
          innerObj = {};
          innerObj[fullSubName] = subValue;
          query += param(innerObj) + '&';
        }
      }
      else if(value instanceof Object) {
        for(subName in value) {
          subValue = value[subName];
          fullSubName = name + '[' + subName + ']';
          innerObj = {};
          innerObj[fullSubName] = subValue;
          query += param(innerObj) + '&';
        }
      }
      else if(value !== undefined && value !== null)
        query += encodeURIComponent(name) + '=' + encodeURIComponent(value) + '&';
    }

    return query.length ? query.substr(0, query.length - 1) : query;
  };

  // Override $http service's default transformRequest
  $httpProvider.defaults.transformRequest = [function(data) {
    return angular.isObject(data) && String(data) !== '[object File]' ? param(data) : data;
  }];
});
share|improve this answer
5  
I have add'd this script to bower, use bower install angular-post-fix --save-dev to add it. – Billy Blaze Dec 1 '14 at 15:23
    
so is there a way to change php's transmits data method. Because that is the issue I am having currently. – Demodave Aug 18 '15 at 22:01
1  
This code works great on the most part, but I've had issues with it when submitting a hierarchy of empty objects or even flat empty values. For example, { a: 1, b: { c: { d: { } } }, e: undefined, f: null, g: 2 } will not be encoded properly, and PHP will get it as [ "a" => "1", "g" => "2" ]. The entire structure under "b", as well as "e" and "f", including the keys themselves - would be lost. I posted alternative code below, with which the above structure gets decoded as: [ "a" => "1", "b" => [ "c" => [ "d" => "" ] ], "e" => "", "f" => "", "g" => "2" ]. – obe Oct 6 '15 at 22:52
1  
how should i implement this for multipart/form-data? – davidlee Nov 7 '15 at 9:06
    
Amazing. I faced a lot of problem but this solved it. :) – Faizuddin Mohammed Feb 16 '16 at 19:50

It's not super clear above, but if you are receiving the request in PHP you can use:

$params = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'),true);

To access an array in PHP from an AngularJS POST.

share|improve this answer
2  
I needed to add true to force it to an array when overwriting the $_POST array with it. json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'), true); – Jon Jan 27 '15 at 2:53
    
hacky, should not be used as a universal solution – Zalaboza Mar 1 '15 at 22:00
4  
@Zalaboza, I would agree that it is tough to have any solution considered 'universal' but I don't agree that it is 'hacky'--- php.net states: "file_get_contents() is the preferred way to read the contents of a file into a string. It will use memory mapping techniques if supported by your OS to enhance performance." Granted we're not reading a file in this situation but we are nonetheless reading posted json data. It would be great if you could contribute a new answer or provide new information to help readers (including myself) make a better decision about this. – Don F Mar 3 '15 at 1:11
    
Thanks man, that is awesome. – Develop Smith Mar 12 '15 at 8:07
    
Thank you so much – Arlind Sep 20 '15 at 18:59

You can set the default "Content-Type" like this:

$http.defaults.headers.post["Content-Type"] = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";

About the data format:

The $http.post and $http.put methods accept any JavaScript object (or a string) value as their data parameter. If data is a JavaScript object it will be, by default, converted to a JSON string.

Try to use this variation

function sendData($scope) {
    $http({
        url: 'request-url',
        method: "POST",
        data: { 'message' : message }
    })
    .then(function(response) {
            // success
    }, 
    function(response) { // optional
            // failed
    });
}
share|improve this answer
8  
It doesn't seem to work. I've just tried the variation with the data as string and : headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'} - and that seem to work, but is there a better way of doing it? – Spencer Mark Oct 8 '13 at 17:17
2  
Set default content type as described above and for data don't use js object. Use string like this: 'message='+message Works for me – gSorry Feb 21 '15 at 12:11

I have had a similar issue, and I wonder if this can be useful as well: http://stackoverflow.com/a/11443066

var xsrf = $.param({fkey: "key"});
$http({
    method: 'POST',
    url: url,
    data: xsrf,
    headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}
})

Regards,

share|improve this answer
    
It looks like the headers was the only change we needed. Thank you! – Ben Guthrie Aug 5 '14 at 6:20
    
Thanks, that did it for me :) The problem was the encoding of the POST data. – Daan Apr 19 '15 at 17:53
    
Thanks, this worked (and is nicest solution of this page!) – Exceptyon Jul 19 '16 at 10:50

I like to use a function to convert objects to post params.

myobject = {'one':'1','two':'2','three':'3'}

Object.toparams = function ObjecttoParams(obj) {
    var p = [];
    for (var key in obj) {
        p.push(key + '=' + encodeURIComponent(obj[key]));
    }
    return p.join('&');
};

$http({
    method: 'POST',
    url: url,
    data: Object.toparams(myobject),
    headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}
})
share|improve this answer
    
the function ObjecttoParams works like charm ! Thanks a lot. – FernandoPaiva Nov 17 '15 at 13:21
    
Simplest solution in my opinion! – Truchainz Jun 30 '16 at 19:12
    
Worked like a charm.. +1 – Priyankara Nov 6 '16 at 17:23

This has finally been addressed in angular 1.4 using $httpParamSerializerJQLike

See https://github.com/angular/angular.js/issues/6039

.controller('myCtrl', function($http, $httpParamSerializerJQLike) {
$http({
  method: 'POST',
  url: baseUrl,
  data: $httpParamSerializerJQLike({
    "user":{
      "email":"[email protected]",
      "password":"123456"
    }
  }),
  headers:
    'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'
})})
share|improve this answer
    
Works perfectly for me.. Thanks..!! – Ritesh Feb 14 '16 at 11:03

I use jQuery param with AngularJS post requrest. Here is a example ... create AngularJS application module, where myapp is defined with ng-app in your HTML code.

var app = angular.module('myapp', []);

Now let us create a Login controller and POST email and password.

app.controller('LoginController', ['$scope', '$http', function ($scope, $http) {
    // default post header
    $http.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded;charset=utf-8';
    // send login data
    $http({
        method: 'POST',
        url: 'https://example.com/user/login',
        data: $.param({
            email: $scope.email,
            password: $scope.password
        }),
        headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}
    }).success(function (data, status, headers, config) {
        // handle success things
    }).error(function (data, status, headers, config) {
        // handle error things
    });
}]);

I don't like to exaplain the code, it is simple enough to understand :) Note that param is from jQuery, so you must install both jQuery and AngularJS to make it working. Here is a screenshot.

enter image description here

Hope this is helpful. Thanks!

share|improve this answer

I had the same problem with AngularJS and Node.js + Express 4 + Router

Router expects the data from post's request in body. This body was always empty if i followed the example from Angular Docs

Notation 1

$http.post('/someUrl', {msg:'hello word!'})

But if i used it in the data

Notation 2

$http({
       withCredentials: false,
       method: 'post',
       url: yourUrl,
       headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'},
       data: postData
 });

Edit 1:

Otherwise node.js router will expect the data in req.body if used notation 1:

req.body.msg

Which also sends the information as JSON payload. This is better in some cases where you have arrays in your json and x-www-form-urlencoded will give some problems.

it worked. Hope it helps.

share|improve this answer

Unlike JQuery and for the sake of pedantry, Angular uses JSON format for POST data transfer from a client to the server (JQuery applies x-www-form-urlencoded presumably, although JQuery and Angular uses JSON for data imput). Therefore there are two parts of problem: in js client part and in your server part. So you need:

  1. put js Angular client part like this:

    $http({
    method: 'POST',
    url: 'request-url',
    data: {'message': 'Hello world'}
    });
    

AND

  1. write in your server part to receive data from a client (if it is php).

            $data               = file_get_contents("php://input");
            $dataJsonDecode     = json_decode($data);
            $message            = $dataJsonDecode->message;
            echo $message;     //'Hello world'
    

Note: $_POST will not work!

The solution works for me fine, hopefully, and for you.

share|improve this answer
1  
спасибо за ответ – IgorBeaz May 13 '15 at 9:47

To build on @felipe-miosso's answer:

  1. Download it as an AngularJS module from here,
  2. Install it
  3. Add it to your application:

    var app = angular.module('my_app', [ ... , 'httpPostFix']);
    
share|improve this answer

To send data via Post methode with $http of angularjs you need to change

data: "message=" + message, with data: $.param({message:message})

share|improve this answer
    
why is data: $.param required when sending AngularJS post data ? – blue-sky May 18 '15 at 13:45

I don't have the reputation to comment, but in response/addition to Don F's answer:

$params = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'));

A second parameter of true needs to be added to the json_decode function in order to properly return an associative array:

$params = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'), true);

share|improve this answer

Angular

  var payload = $.param({ jobId: 2 });

                this.$http({
                    method: 'POST',
                    url: 'web/api/ResourceAction/processfile',
                    data: payload,
                    headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' }
                });

WebAPI 2

public class AcceptJobParams
        {
            public int jobId { get; set; }
        }

        public IHttpActionResult ProcessFile([FromBody]AcceptJobParams thing)
        {
            // do something with fileName parameter

            return Ok();
        }
share|improve this answer

This code solved the issue for me. It is an application-level solution:

moduleName.config(['$httpProvider',
  function($httpProvider) {
    $httpProvider.defaults.transformRequest.push(function(data) {
        var requestStr;
        if (data) {
            data = JSON.parse(data);
            for (var key in data) {
                if (requestStr) {
                    requestStr += "&" + key + "=" + data[key];
                } else {
                    requestStr = key + "=" + data[key];
                }
            }
        }
        return requestStr;
    });
    $httpProvider.defaults.headers.post["Content-Type"] = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";
  }
]);
share|improve this answer

Add this in your js file:

$http.defaults.headers.post["Content-Type"] = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded";

and add this to your server file:

$params = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'), true);

That should work.

share|improve this answer

I know has accepted answer. But, following might help to future readers, if the answer doesn't suit them for any reason.

Angular doesn't do ajax same as jQuery. While I tried to follow the guide to modify angular $httpprovider , I encountered other problems. E.g. I use codeigniter in which $this->input->is_ajax_request() function always failed (which was written by another programmer and used globally, so cant change) saying this was not real ajax request.

To solve it, I took help of deferred promise. I tested it in Firefox, and ie9 and it worked.

I have following function defined outside any of the angular code. This function makes regular jquery ajax call and returns deferred/promise (I'm still learning) object.

function getjQueryAjax(url, obj){
    return $.ajax({
        type: 'post',
        url: url,
        cache: true,
        data: obj
    });
}

Then I'm calling it angular code using the following code. Please note that we have to update the $scope manually using $scope.$apply() .

    var data = {
        media: "video",
        scope: "movies"
    };
    var rPromise = getjQueryAjax("myController/getMeTypes" , data);
    rPromise.success(function(response){
        console.log(response);
        $scope.$apply(function(){
            $scope.testData = JSON.parse(response);
            console.log($scope.testData);
        });
    }).error(function(){
        console.log("AJAX failed!");
    });

This may not be the perfect answer, but it allowed me to use jquery ajax calls with angular and allowed me to update the $scope.

share|improve this answer
    
Angular has it own promises service called $q since 1.3. No need to use JQuery for a post. – mbokil Feb 22 '16 at 21:05

I also faced similar problem and i was doing something like this and that didn't worked. My Spring controller was not able read data parameter.

var paramsVal={data:'"id":"1"'};
  $http.post("Request URL",  {params: paramsVal});  

But reading this forum and API Doc, I tried following way and that worked for me. If some one also have similar problem, You can try below way as well.

$http({
      method: 'POST',
      url: "Request URL",           
      params: paramsVal,
      headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded;charset=utf-8'}
            });

Please check https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$http#post for what param config does. {data:'"id":"1"'} – Map of strings or objects which will be turned to URL?data="id:1"

share|improve this answer

I am using asp.net WCF webservices with angular js and below code worked:

 $http({
        contentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8",//required
        method: "POST",
        url: '../../operation/Service.svc/user_forget',
        dataType: "json",//optional
        data:{ "uid_or_phone": $scope.forgettel, "user_email": $scope.forgetemail },
        async: "isAsync"//optional

       }).success( function (response) {

         $scope.userforgeterror = response.d;                    
       })

Hope it helps.

share|improve this answer

Didn't find a complete code snippet of how to use $http.post method to send data to the server and why it was not working in this case.

Explanations of below code snippet...

  1. I am using jQuery $.param function to serialize the JSON data to www post data
  2. Setting the Content-Type in the config variable that will be passed along with the request of angularJS $http.post that instruct the server that we are sending data in www post format.

  3. Notice the $htttp.post method, where I am sending 1st parameter as url, 2nd parameter as data (serialized) and 3rd parameter as config.

Remaining code is self understood.

$scope.SendData = function () {
           // use $.param jQuery function to serialize data from JSON 
            var data = $.param({
                fName: $scope.firstName,
                lName: $scope.lastName
            });

            var config = {
                headers : {
                    'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded;charset=utf-8;'
                }
            }

            $http.post('/ServerRequest/PostDataResponse', data, config)
            .success(function (data, status, headers, config) {
                $scope.PostDataResponse = data;
            })
            .error(function (data, status, header, config) {
                $scope.ResponseDetails = "Data: " + data +
                    "<hr />status: " + status +
                    "<hr />headers: " + header +
                    "<hr />config: " + config;
            });
        };

Look at the code example of $http.post method here.

share|improve this answer

this is probably a late answer but i think the most proper way is to use the same piece of code angular use when doing a "get" request using you $httpParamSerializer will have to inject it to your controller so you can simply do the following without having to use Jquery at all , $http.post(url,$httpParamSerializer({param:val}))

app.controller('ctrl',function($scope,$http,$httpParamSerializer){
    $http.post(url,$httpParamSerializer({param:val,secondParam:secondVal}));
}
share|improve this answer

When I had this problem the parameter I was posting turned out to be an array of objects instead of a simple object.

share|improve this answer

I had the same problem in express .. to resolve you have to use bodyparser to parse json objects before sending http requests ..

app.use(bodyParser.json());
share|improve this answer

Just updated from angular 1.2 to 1.3, have found a problem in the code. Transforming a resource will lead to an endless-loop because (I think) of the $promise holding again the same object. Maybe it will help someone...

I could fix that by:

[...]
  /**
 * The workhorse; converts an object to x-www-form-urlencoded serialization.
 * @param {Object} obj
 * @return {String}
 */
var param = function (obj) {
var query = '', name, value, fullSubName, subName, subValue, innerObj, i;

angular.forEach(obj, function(value, name) {
+    if(name.indexOf("$promise") != -1) {
+        return;
+    }

    value = obj[name];
    if (value instanceof Array) {
        for (i = 0; i < value.length; ++i) {
[...]
share|improve this answer

I've been using the accepted answer's code (Felipe's code) for a while and it's been working great (thanks, Felipe!).

However, recently I discovered that it has issues with empty objects or arrays. For example, when submitting this object:

{
    A: 1,
    B: {
        a: [ ],
    },
    C: [ ],
    D: "2"
}

PHP doesn't seem to see B and C at all. It gets this:

[
    "A" => "1",
    "B" => "2"
]

A look at the actual request in Chrome shows this:

A: 1
:
D: 2

I wrote an alternative code snippet. It seems to work well with my use-cases but I haven't tested it extensively so use with caution.

I used TypeScript because I like strong typing but it would be easy to convert to pure JS:

angular.module("MyModule").config([ "$httpProvider", function($httpProvider: ng.IHttpProvider) {
    // Use x-www-form-urlencoded Content-Type
    $httpProvider.defaults.headers.post["Content-Type"] = "application/x-www-form-urlencoded;charset=utf-8";

    function phpize(obj: Object | any[], depth: number = 1): string[] {
        var arr: string[] = [ ];
        angular.forEach(obj, (value: any, key: string) => {
            if (angular.isObject(value) || angular.isArray(value)) {
                var arrInner: string[] = phpize(value, depth + 1);
                var tmpKey: string;
                var encodedKey = encodeURIComponent(key);
                if (depth == 1) tmpKey = encodedKey;
                else tmpKey = `[${encodedKey}]`;
                if (arrInner.length == 0) {
                    arr.push(`${tmpKey}=`);
                }
                else {
                    arr = arr.concat(arrInner.map(inner => `${tmpKey}${inner}`));
                }
            }
            else {
                var encodedKey = encodeURIComponent(key);
                var encodedValue;
                if (angular.isUndefined(value) || value === null) encodedValue = "";
                else encodedValue = encodeURIComponent(value);

                if (depth == 1) {
                    arr.push(`${encodedKey}=${encodedValue}`);
                }
                else {
                    arr.push(`[${encodedKey}]=${encodedValue}`);
                }
            }
        });
        return arr;
    }

    // Override $http service's default transformRequest
    (<any>$httpProvider.defaults).transformRequest = [ function(data: any) {
        if (!angular.isObject(data) || data.toString() == "[object File]") return data;
        return phpize(data).join("&");
    } ];
} ]);

It's less efficient than Felipe's code but I don't think it matters much since it should be immediate compared to the overall overhead of the HTTP request itself.

Now PHP shows:

[
    "A" => "1",
    "B" => [
        "a" => ""
    ],
    "C" => "",
    "D" => "2"
]

As far as I know it's not possible to get PHP to recognize that B.a and C are empty arrays, but at least the keys appear, which is important when there's code that relies on the a certain structure even when its essentially empty inside.

Also note that it converts undefineds and nulls to empty strings.

share|improve this answer
    
TypeScript the best way to code in POO with JavaScript ! – Disfigure Dec 10 '15 at 17:31

If your using PHP this is a easy way to access an array in PHP from an AngularJS POST.

$params = json_decode(file_get_contents('php://input'),true);
share|improve this answer
    
This article may help people. – Stphane Aug 10 '16 at 7:04

I solved this by below codes:

Client Side (Js):

     $http({
                url: me.serverPath,
                method: 'POST',
                data: data,
                headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' },
            }).
                success(function (serverData) {
                    console.log("ServerData:", serverData);
    ......

notice that data is an object.

On the server (ASP.NET MVC):

[AllowCrossSiteJson]
        public string Api()
        {
            var data = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<AgentRequest>(Request.Form[0]);
            if (data == null) return "Null Request";
            var bl = Page.Bl = new Core(this);

            return data.methodName;
        }

and 'AllowCrossSiteJsonAttribute' is needed for cross domain requests:

public class AllowCrossSiteJsonAttribute : ActionFilterAttribute
    {
        public override void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
        {
            filterContext.RequestContext.HttpContext.Response.AddHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*");
            base.OnActionExecuting(filterContext);
        }
    }

Hope this was useful.

share|improve this answer

It's not angular's fault. Angular is designed to work in JSON world. So when $http service send AJAX request, it send all your data as a payload, not as form-data so that your backend application can handle it. But jQuery does some things internally. You instruct jQuery's $ajax module to bind form-data as JSON but before sending AJAX request, it serialized JSON and add application/x-www-form-urlencoded header. This way your backend application able to received form-data in form of post parameters and not JSON.

But you can modify angular $http service's default behavior by

  1. Adding header
  2. Serializing json

$httpParamSerializerJQLike is angular's in-built service which serializes json in the same way $.param does of jQuery.

$http({
    method: 'POST',
    url: 'request-url',
    data: $httpParamSerializerJQLike(json-form-data),
    headers: {
      'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8;'
    }
});

If you need a plugin to serialize form-data into JSON first, use this one https://github.com/marioizquierdo/jquery.serializeJSON

share|improve this answer
    
when I tried with, $http.put('/api/', {name:1}). it's sending with serialized json data. but for POST, I need to set header and serialize the data as you said. do you know why PUT doesn't need that, but only POST need? – Expert wanna be Sep 23 '16 at 10:36
    
That's impossible. – Uday Hiwarale Sep 23 '16 at 10:48
    
My bad :(, Thank you so much for your commenting – Expert wanna be Sep 23 '16 at 11:25

In my case I resolve the problem like this :

var deferred = $q.defer();

$http({
    method: 'POST',
    url: 'myUri', 
    data: $.param({ param1: 'blablabla', param2: JSON.stringify(objJSON) }),
    headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' }
}).then(
    function(res) {
        console.log('succes !', res.data);
        deferred.resolve(res.data);
    },
    function(err) {
        console.log('error...', err);
        deferred.resolve(err);
    }
);
return deferred.promise;

You need to use JSON.stringify for each param containing a JSON object, and then build your data object with "$.param" :-)

NB : My "objJSON" is a JSON object containing array, integer, string and html content. His total size is >3500 characters.

share|improve this answer

use this way. no need to write so much

 isAuth = $http.post("Yr URL", {username: username, password: password});

and in the nodejs back end

app.post("Yr URL",function(req,resp)
{

  var username = req.body.username||req.param('username');
  var password = req.body.password||req.param('password');
}

I hope this helps

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I wrote a small PHP helper function that allows both types of input parameters :

function getArgs () {
    if ($input = file_get_contents('php://input') && $input_params = json_decode($input,true))
        return $input_params + $_POST + $_GET;
    return $_POST + $_GET;
}

Usage :

<?php
    include("util.php"); # above code
    $request = getArgs();

    $myVar = "";
    if (isset($request['myVar']))
        $myVar = $request['myVar'];
?>

Therefore no changes required to your JavaScript.

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