Use this instead: 
        var oHead = document.getElementsByTagName('HEAD').item(0);
var oScript= document.createElement("script");
oScript.type = "text/javascript";
oScript.src="http://domain.com/jsonfile.json";;
oScript.onload = function(){
alert("Done"); 
}
oHead.appendChild( oScript);

On Wednesday, July 31, 2013 10:42:03 PM UTC+2, ryandesign wrote:
>
> On Jul 31, 2013, at 11:56, Michael Ryan wrote: 
>
> >> I know how to use XMLHttpRequest and have already written a loadFile 
> function using it. But that's only necessary when running in a browser. I 
> have found XMLHttpRequest implementations for node in npm which I could 
> include, but all I really want when running in node is for loadFile to load 
> the file from the local filesystem using fs.readSync or equivalent. 
> > 
> > So, why not use fs.readSync? 
>
> In node, I probably will. 
>
> In the browser, there is no fs module and indeed no filesystem. The 
> compatibility modules for fs that I've found use the new HTML5 local 
> storage, which is not what I'm after. 
>
>
>

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