last day (14 days later) » 

06:25
hello
hi
well that was a bit confusing wasn't it
yes haha
ok so I think you understand what I'm trying to do
what kind of code are you loading anyway, just its ballpark usage?
but basically, we have clients pasting in our script tag into their head tag, and we've been using $(document).ready for our asynchronously added script tag to execute
what do you mean by usage?
like how often is it being loaded in?
more like the purpose of the script
i.e. tracking/analitics
06:27
co-browsing
so right now, doc.ready works fine most of the time
but sometimes, if a web page has a hanging script, our co-browsing won't run until that script is fully loaded in
hmm, interesting
so we're worried that for some people with slow internet connects or clients with slow websites, we're waiting too long with the DOMContentLoaded evnet
connections*
but we do need to wait for the entire DOM to be parseable
using a setTimeout would definitely wait until everything is parsed because browsers are single threaded
yeah, not necessarily for DOM ready though
but it would still probably wait for a synchronously loaded script to load in?
yes, that's what my local tests came back with
06:31
but maybe not a slow async script?
so if there is a slow external async script
that has been queued for loading before your code
then the order isn't guaranteed at all - that's what "async" is for :/
where do your clients add your script tag to right now?
i.e. in relation to other script tags on the page
HEAD tag
we should probably have them add it to bottom of the body tag from now on
and bother our existing clients
to change it
but they're going to hate that haha
seems like the best we can do is using a setTimeout with its second parameter set to 0
I'm just trying to think
if your code is in head
even if there was a way to defer all client scripts after it until DOM is ready to be manipulated
06:37
hmm, that's an interesting idea
although I don't think out clients would be too happy about that
our*
increasing load times like that
do I understand correctly that co-browsing is more of a focus group/research/UX debug kind of mode
rather than everyday workflow?
yeah, although it's more for customer support
and remote web presentations
so I could load your client's "normal" page
browse for half a minute
and then click "request assistance"
...meaning that co-browsing code doesn't need to be loaded until I click the button? :)
06:40
but then on the next page load
ah
the co-browsing would continie
yes of course
continue
and that's the main use case for this
for this particular issue
IMO even if the co-browsing code were loaded first thing
and then followed by some bloated client js
it would be pretty useless. since it wouldn't be able to send/receive cursor pos etc.
until the bloated script is finished
...
06:43
yeah
and if you add your script at the end
it should persist in client cache
and be pretty snazzy (speed-wise)
the cache is affected by the location of the script?
there will be a momentary lag though opening the websocket(?)
if the script src could remain the same, a correct caching setting would be sufficient
but if you pass it get parameters, that's a no-go
anyway, to the previous point
yeah, it'll take a bit of time to establish the websocket connection, but that's pretty negligible
my thought exactly
06:46
no get paramters on the script tag
beautiful; if you sit through a session as the client with F12 network profiler open
Chrome/Firebug should tell you if resource is loaded from cache or not
if it isn't, kick your infrastructure team but read up on cachebusting :)
ah yeah
haha, I am the infrastructure team :P
we're just two guys still
Neat, good luck! Well you basically want maximum expiry time of 1yr, but be able to change the URL of the script src in case there is a bugfix/new feature added
if that makes sense
yup makes sense
like versioning in the query string
exactly
06:49
what do you think about this hanging script issue though?
is it unavoidable?
pretty much
flow will resume after it "un-hangs"
...or will not resume if it's killed
so putting execution inside of a setTimeout might be a bit better than waiting for DOMContentLoaded
and I won't risk prematurely parsing the DOM with a setTimeout because the browser is single threaded
that's the gist of it, right?
oh, you'd actually be able to manipulate elements; the only one I had major issues with in test were html and body, but their descendants were OK
I reckon this is plenty, not sure how much of this would work out though :)
06:53
you had issues manipulating html and body?
just the elements themselves; I could add children/event listeners etc
oh
could you add a property?
and get attributes?
not consistently
hmm
this is with the setTimeout, right?
yes; keep in mind my IMO though
it would be such a marginal win anyway... but if you're after every edge, good luck profiling these things
06:56
right
haha
maybe get into Selenium automated testing
anyway
exciting as this was
haha, yeah thanks for the help
let me give you the bounty
wait the seven days, someone might beat me fair and square :) update the question if things change
good luck
06:58
i gave it to you
thanks, saw that. Neat app imo

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