Correct Answer: Client-side code is inherently insecure
Explanation:
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
Ajax Skill Assessment
Your Skill Level: Poor
Retake Quizzes to improve it
More Ajax MCQ Questions
According to the W3C specification, which HTTP methods should throw a security exception when used with XMLHttpRequest?
Your cross-origin Ajax request is causing your console to throw the error "Resource interpreted as Script but transferred with MIME type application/json. Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token :" What might be happening?
After a request completes, which property of the XMLHttpRequest object can be used to retrieve a DOM representation of a remote XML document?
Which of these is NOT an advantage of using Ajax over server-side processing?
What happens if an Ajax call completes (and calls its callback function) when other JavaScript is currently running?
For the code fragment below function foo() { var httpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest(); httpRequest.open('GET', '/echo/json'); httpRequest.send(); return httpRequest.responseText; } var result = foo(); What will be the value of ‘result’
The browser will put 'text' that the server returns in which of the following Request Object property?
Fill the correct blanks in following code: Function processXhrChange() { // Check readyState to make sure the XMLHttpRequest has been fully loaded if (Xhr.readyState == ______ ) { // Check status code from server for 'OK' if ( Xhr.status == ______ ) { // Process incoming data // Update our hit counter Hit = hit + 1; } else { // Request had a status code other than 200 Alert ('There was a problem communicating with the server\n'); } }
Which property of XMLHttpRequest object holds its status?
Can ActiveXObject work on browsers like Chrome and Firefox?