The Request Object

The server processes some methods, such as Load, Get, Play, and Speak, asynchronously. This enables your application code to continue while the method is completing. When a client application calls one of these methods, the control creates and returns a Request object for the request. You can use the Request object to track the status of the method by assigning an object variable to the method. In VBScript and Visual Basic, first declare an object variable:

    Dim MyRequest as Object

In VBScript, you don't include the variable type in your declaration:

    Dim MyRequest

And use Visual Basic's Set statement to assign the variable to the method call:

    Set Request = agent.Characters("CharacterID").method (parameter[s])

This adds a reference to the Request object. The Request object will be destroyed when there are no more references to it. Where you declare the Request object and how you use it determines its lifetime. If the object is declared local to a subroutine or function, it will be destroyed when it goes out of scope; that is, when the subroutine or function is complete. If the object is declared globally, it will not be destroyed until either the program terminates or a new value (or a value set to "empty") is assigned to the object.

The Request object provides several properties you can query. For example, the Status property returns the current status of the request. You can use this property to check the status of your request:

    Dim MyRequest
    
    Set MyRequest = Agent1.Characters.Load ("Genie", _
        "http://agent.microsoft.com/characters/genie/genie.acf")

    If (MyRequest.Status = Pending) then
        'do something

    Else If (MyRequest.Status = Complete) then
        'do something right away

    End If

The Status property returns the status of a Request object as a Long integer value.

Status Definition
0 Request successfully completed.
1 Request failed.
2 Request pending (in the queue, but not complete).
3 Request interrupted.
4 Request in progress.

The Request object also includes a Long integer value in the Number property that returns the error or cause of the Status code. If none, this value is zero (0). The Description property contains a string value that corresponds to the error number. If the string doesn't exist, Description contains "Application-defined or object-defined error".

For the values and meaning returned by the Number property, see Error Codes.

The server places animation requests in the specified character's queue. This enables the server to play the animation on a separate thread, and your application's code can continue while animations play. If you create a Request object reference, the server automatically notifies you when an animation request has started or completed through the RequestStart and RequestComplete events. Because methods that return Request objects are asynchronous and may not complete during the scope of the calling function, declare your reference to the Request object globally.

The following methods can be used to return a Request object: GestureAt, Get, Hide, Interrupt, Load, MoveTo, Play, Show, Speak, Wait.

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