Building up and sending an Ajax request is so much easier than it ever used to be. No longer must we hassle ourselves with XMLHttpRequest , never mind the horror of ActiveX’s ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP") . The Fetch API is here (and it is polyfilled for older browsers). Then there’s the FormData object that makes building up and submitting form data really easy, especially compared to the 130 or so lines of JavaScript you’d need to do it yourself.

But you can still get things wrong. I can definitely get things wrong.

So I wanted to write about what I got wrong to remind myself for the future. My mistakes involved the Fetch API, FormData and a simple Express server in Node.js.

I couldn’t POST any data

It was simple, I wanted to POST some data to my server. I had Express set up, I’d installed body-parser (normally something I forget to do until this kind of problem comes along), I had a route that was ready to receive my data and do something with it.

It looked a little like this:

const Express = require ( " express " ); const bodyParser = require ( " body-parser " ); const app = new Express (); app . use ( bodyParser . urlencoded ({ extended : true })); app . post ( " / " , function ( request , response ) { console . log ( request . body . foo ); response . send ( " OK " ); }); app . listen ( 3000 , function () { console . log ( " Application is listening on localhost:3000 " ); });

OK, it was more complicated than that, but that’s all we need to demonstrate this.

The front end was going to be even easier.

var formData = new FormData (); formData . append ( " foo " , " bar " ); fetch ( " / " , { method : " POST " , body : formData }). then ( function ( response ) { // Yay! }). catch ( function ( err ) { // Boo! });

The plan was simple: run the server, run the front end code, see “bar” printed in the console, celebrate.

undefined , the JavaScript developer’s worst enemy (aside from perhaps callback hell and developers from other languages telling them that they’re doing it wrong).

I searched up and down the request object, looking for that simple piece of data that I had sent. I checked in all the places I thought it might be request.body , request.params , request.query , Express has all of those you know. I checked in plenty of places I didn’t think it would be. Finally I did what any sensible developer would do. I asked the internet.

The internet is a wonderful support network

I love that out there is a resource where I can ask questions and people respond and help me. The internet came up trumps in this case, I asked and many people chimed in with ways to fix the issue.

The first solution was to set the content type to JSON and just send JSON to the server.

var data = { foo : " bar " }; fetch ( " / " , { method : " POST " , body : JSON . stringify ( data ), headers : { " Content-Type " : " application/json " } }). then ( function ( response ) { // Yay! }). catch ( function ( err ) { // Boo! });

This worked, but I was confused. I had this really easy FormData object to work with, but the solution was to throw it away and use JSON.stringify ? It didn’t seem right. It worked but I wanted to persist and make it work the way I had intended.

It works in Rails

Eventually Edd sorted me out. Firstly he said that my front end JavaScript wasn’t wrong, the same code worked with a Rails back end. I think that put him on the route to find the correct answer though.

It turns out that body-parser doesn’t understand multipart/form-data encoded forms (though as Edd pointed out, Rails does). And FormData , when added to a Fetch API request (or an XMLHttpRequest as it happens, I checked), will set the content type to multipart/form-data . It actually says that right here in the first paragraph of the MDN documentation. In bold.

I like to say that “people don’t read things on the internet”. I don’t read things on the internet.

In my defence, I would have thought that body-parser might parse the body of the request. Once again skimming over the documentation was my downfall. Check out line 2 of the body-parser readme.

In fact, the body-parser readme doesn’t just say that it won’t handle multipart/form-data bodies, it even goes as far as suggesting other modules to use for those requests.

I ended up using formidable via the express-formidable middleware. Our example server now looks like this:

const Express = require ( " express " ); const bodyParser = require ( " body-parser " ); const formidable = require ( " express-formidable " ); const app = new Express (); app . use ( bodyParser . urlencoded ({ extended : true })); app . use ( formidable ()); app . post ( " / " , function ( request , response ) { console . log ( request . fields . foo ) response . send ( " OK " ); }); app . listen ( 3000 , function () { console . log ( " Application is listening on localhost:3000 " ); });

Lessons learned

FormData objects set the content type of a Fetch API (or XMLHttpRequest ) request to multipart/form-data automagically.

body-parser doesn’t support parsing the body of a multipart/form-data request. But there are many options that do.

The internet is a very helpful place. Thank you to Edd and others who suggested what I might be doing wrong.

READ THE DOCUMENTATION. Then probably read it again just to make sure.

There are no surprises

There are actually very few surprises in development, particularly when using modern browser APIs and well supported frameworks and reading the documentation. I learned quite a bit from this one small episode as you can see above. The next thing I need to do is write some documentation for someone else. Eventually, they’ll read it and be thankful as I was.