This is easy if your Javascript engine supports XMLHttpRequest (XHR), which is ubiquitous on the web. Google it or see this page for details. I've provided a code snippet below. Read it carefully, particularly the comments on "async" being true and closures in response handlers. Also, this code is super lightweight as far as Javascript goes and I would expect it would work fine on just about any contemporary hardware footprint.
var url = "http://www.google.com/";
var method = "POST";
var postData = "Some data";
// You REALLY want shouldBeAsync = true.
// Otherwise, it'll block ALL execution waiting for server response.
var shouldBeAsync = true;
var request = new XMLHttpRequest();
// Before we send anything, we first have to say what we will do when the
// server responds. This seems backwards (say how we'll respond before we send
// the request? huh?), but that's how Javascript works.
// This function attached to the XMLHttpRequest "onload" property specifies how
// the HTTP response will be handled.
request.onload = function () {
// Because of javascript's fabulous closure concept, the XMLHttpRequest "request"
// object declared above is available in this function even though this function
// executes long after the request is sent and long after this function is
// instantiated. This fact is CRUCIAL to the workings of XHR in ordinary
// applications.
// You can get all kinds of information about the HTTP response.
var status = request.status; // HTTP response status, e.g., 200 for "200 OK"
var data = request.responseText; // Returned data, e.g., an HTML document.
}
request.open(method, url, shouldBeAsync);
request.setRequestHeader("Content-Type", "application/json;charset=UTF-8");
// Or... request.setRequestHeader("Content-Type", "text/plain;charset=UTF-8");
// Or... whatever
// Actually sends the request to the server.
request.send(postData);
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