I'm using jstree on a project and attempting to save my tree to a database.
I'm obtaining the tree data as follows:
var tmp = $('#tree').jstree(true).get_json();
console.log(tmp);
This produces a JSON object in the console as I'd expect:
However when I post this to a PHP script using jquery...
$.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url: '/saveTree',
data: {'tree': tmp},
success: function(msg) {
console.log(msg);
}
});
... It is showing a PHP array of my data:
The script which I have at /saveTree displays the POST data in the tree array post key:
var_dump($this->request->data['tree']);
I assumed since the data I'm posting to the script is in JSON format I'd need to json_decode() it at the other end? If not, why not?
I've also tried adding dataType: 'json', in the ajax request but that makes no difference.
What's happening here?
Please note the PHP script at /saveTree is running in CakePHP 2.x so the line of PHP above is equivalent to var_dump($_POST['tree']) in regular PHP.


Content-Typeheader.dataType: 'json'in the ajax request? Because it seems to be doing exactly the same thing with or without that. That's why I was confused!Content-Type:text/html;is showing in Chrome's Network tab when making the request to/saveTreeContent-Type:text/htmlon the request, or the response?application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8irrespective of whetherdataTypehas been specified in the ajax call. Is that normal?