@OP Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
function preload(list, imageCallback, callback) {
var at, len;
at = len = list.length;
for (var i = 0; i < len; i++) {
var img = new Image();
img.onload = function() {
if (imageCallback) {
imageCallback.call(img, img, len - at, len);
}
if (--at === 0) {
callback(list);
}
}
img.src = 'src' in list[i] ? list[i].src : list[i];
list[i] = img;
}
return list;
}
var list = ['picture1.jpg','picture2.jpg', ... ];
or use xhr to pull the images if you don't want a spinner in the browser
where i am going with this is that i'm trying to find a way to reduce time it takes to request all of these images. I had read suggestion about spreading images across multiple servers for handling high number of requests
This is probably the wrong room for that, then; though honestly; I wouldn't go down the path of doing something fancy with the service architecture until you have data showing that you need to.
I mean, you're loading 150 images, of course it's going to take time. That doesn't necessarily mean that the service architecture is the limiting factor.
looking up "Service Architecture". is this the same as "Service-oriented architecture"
and to restate my main question - i was reading that your basic server - whatever that is - processes about 2-3 requests at a time. So 150 requests are bundled into 75+ requests.
So spreading requests across multiple servers should speed up entire process?
Again, I'm not even sure it's the service that's going to be your limiting factor. Your performance likely won't depend on how fast the service can handle requests but on how fast your client can download those images.
If it's your client that's the limiting factor, adding more servers won't improve performance any.
@Bhargav Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
When you type an illegal npm command, you are getting a user-friendly error message stating which commands are legal to use:
$ npm illegal
Usage: npm <command>
where <command> is one of:
add-user, adduser, apihelp, author, bin, bugs, c, cache,
completion, config, ddp, dedupe, deprecate...
I don't know, I tried to make the answer better and specific, with examples..30 times before the questions were met in a more respectful way
I am just trying to say that it's not my first time asking and I really feel like the question is legitimate - it is very specific, it is about programming, it has examples, the answer is based on the fact (it is answered directly and specifically)
I've heard that when you have an element on top of a canvas and you make it change (for example the text in a p, maybe displaying the score of a game) even if the canvas just represents an image, it has to redraw itself because brower reasons. Couldn't find this on google, but saw that drawing my text on canvas instead of changing the content on top of it is definitely faster, and Mmiszy seemed to have confirmed
Does the same happen with the css background: -webkit-canvas('name')?
if you change the content of the element with that background, will the browser have to redraw the canvas?
@rlemon you seem to know more than most of us about -webkit-canvas. Google couldn't help again ^
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest;
xhr.onload = callback;
xhr.onerror = errback;
xhr.onprogress = progress; // <- use this for progress tracking of long task
xhr.open("GET", yoursite);
xhr.send();
All available since IE9, all works, all dead simple.
It's an old question but I had a similar need. I wanted to run a script with the php system() cmd and show the output.
I've done it without polling.
For Second Rikudoit case should be somthing like this:
JAVASCRIPT
$('#formatRaid').click(function(event){
$.ajax({
xhr: ...
This guy already has it correctly, the only problem with what he has is jQuery
Things like this actually favour tree-like threading (as you see on HN or reddit or whatever), which for some inane reason no chat software I know of supports.
@darkyen00 you know, we actually read answers people link to
I didn't even get halfway through your answer.
@darkyen00 why are you using setAttribute to set attributes on a progress bar?
(Does HTML have a progress bar element?)
Also, he clearly stated his problem is not upload events, but rather a script taking a long time to execute on the server, not to mention that PHP doesn't start processing the result until it's all there on the server, there is no 'partial parsing'
@darkyen00 have an upvote, I think you should structure your answer better though: start with explaining the problem, then the conceptual shift required to understand how a solution would look, then how it's possible conceptually to solve it, then show the different solutions and explain why each one is better.
If your task is to upload a huge data-set or process it on the server, while updating progress to the server you should consider going with some sort of jobs architechture, where you initiate the job and do it with some other script running on the server (for example scaling / processing images e...
Guys, I am starting to learn javascript, I want to work on something in parallel as only reading wont benefit you in long run, you have to implement the concepts you learn. So do you have any suggestions where to start or any good open source project for beginners or any good project ideas to start with.
@OmsaiJadhav Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.