I know that Fetch API uses Promise
s and both of them allow you to do AJAX requests to a server.
I have read that Fetch API has some extra features, whic
ReadableStream
instances as request bodies is yet to come)AnonXMLHttpRequest
constructor)FormData
instancesfetch
's no-cors
modeThe answers above are good and provide good insights, but I share the same opinion as shared in this google developers blog entry in that the main difference (from a practical perspective) is the convenience of the built-in promise returned from fetch
Instead of having to write code like this
function reqListener() {
var data = JSON.parse(this.responseText);
}
function reqError(err) { ... }
var oReq = new XMLHttpRequest();
oReq.onload = reqListener;
oReq.onerror = reqError;
oReq.open('get', './api/some.json', true);
oReq.send();
we can clean things up and write something a little more concise and readable with promises and modern syntax
fetch('./api/some.json')
.then((response) => {
response.json().then((data) => {
...
});
})
.catch((err) => { ... });
There are a few things that you can do with fetch and not with XHR:
no-cors
requests, getting a response from a server that doesn't implement CORS. You can't access the response body directly from JavaScript, but you can use it with other APIs (e.g. the Cache API);There are a couple of things that you can do with XHR that you can't do yet with fetch, but they're going to be available sooner or later (read the "Future improvements" paragraph here: https://hacks.mozilla.org/2015/03/this-api-is-so-fetching/):
This article https://jakearchibald.com/2015/thats-so-fetch/ contains a more detailed description.