This is very similar to Wait until all jQuery Ajax requests are done?, except that I want to know the best practice of doing that in Mootools.
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Mootools is compatible with jQuery, so you should be able to do exactly the same thing as described in the post you linked. See http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10100057/is-it-possible-to-use-mootools-and-jquery-both-together – Robert Harvey Sep 14 '13 at 01:28
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Does Mootools itself provide any methods for this? – twimo Sep 14 '13 at 01:32
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I don't see one in the documentation, no. – Robert Harvey Sep 14 '13 at 02:51
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1@RobertHarvey you can wrap request in a 3rd party promises/flow api but it's not out of the box. Request.Queue is a halfway solution. – Dimitar Christoff Sep 14 '13 at 04:46
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http://mootools.net/docs/more/Request/Request.Queue
In addition to these events there is an onEnd event that is fired when all the requests have finished.
I'm going to extend the example from the documentation:
var myRequests = {
r1: new Request({
url: '/foo1.php', data: { foo1: 'bar1'},
onComplete: function(text, xml){
console.log('myRequests.r1: ', text, xml);
}
}),
r2: new Request({
url: '/foo2.php', data: { foo2: 'bar2'},
onComplete: function(text, xml){
console.log('myRequests.r2: ', text, xml);
}
})
};
var myQueue = new Request.Queue({
requests: myRequests,
concurrent: myRequests.length,
onEnd: function() {
console.log('Everything is done!');
},
onComplete: function(name, instance, text, xml){
console.log('queue: ' + name + ' response: ', text, xml);
}
});
myQueue.send();

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