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03:56
ok
ok
sorry about that
now.. you say you're not creating any other objects inside the calculation?
i am not creating any new objects
only updating coordinate values as well as height width and possible color
so there are portions of the calulation that may be skipped?
basically i have an image as my background and using svg to create labels. text, rectangles, and path objects.
my labels are clickable and lead to other maps
04:02
So you're re-calculating the position and occasionally the color of SVG objects?
yes
Dude.
You should expect variances in performance with that.
this part i have figured out
Even from one run to the next!
04:04
Think about it. Suppose all of your objects were non-overlapping
yes
In that case, it's easy for the svg renderer to draw them all
yes...correct
now suppose as time moves on, they begin to overlap in different ways.
Now the SVG renderer has to do some calculations 2 or more times to get the final result for each pixel of each object!
but the user might not necessarily wish to increase the size of individual labels just because he changed background size.
04:05
Doesn't matter
i have already created a very efficient way to detect overlap
i hear where you are going
took me a couple of months
but i got it
: )
i have figured that piece of the pie out.
that i can show you if you with
wish
So you're saying SVG object overlap doesn't occur?
when screen is scaled down to a certain points elements will overlap
i have come up with collision detection solution for that. That part is fast. trust me
So you're preventing overlaps?
yes i am preventing overlaps
04:11
Doesn't that cause a re-calculation to occur when an overlap happens?
It seems to me that there's no way to avoid the standard 3 steps:

perform calculation
check for collision or overlap
perform new calulation with different adjustment
Even then, the new calulation should trigger a new collision check
If it works out that a particular object gets re-adjusted several times on 1 pass, then you're incurring penalties .
since all elements scale down at same rate.. i only have to figure out which two elements will collide first when scaling down page. then those two elements are the only two i have
to monitor
if have already tested this using chrome dev tools.
its no bottleneck. It is fast. trust me
I'm catching up with you....
You've got a bunch of svg labels on a display and you're resizing the display. You're also adjusting the size of the labels inside if it looks like the labels might overlap.
or if user needs to increase font of labels
It would have probably been easier to say that as part of your problem description.
seemed like to much to go in to
04:20
no.
In fact, this kind of information is usually required in order to help people understand the nature of the problem.
Now, let's see if we can't cook a solution
my core problem was of finding faster way to store updated values.
i can live with initial page load being a tiny bit slow. but when user clicks scale up or down button i need this to be fast
no large pauses
Think about it. Even what you're calling the "core problem" is just your attempt to solve another problem. Sometimes, knowing what you're trying to do at a high level can lead to a better solution.
i am attempting to create a large library of user defined maps and i want it be easily clicked through.
... and those maps need to be scalable with re-sizeable fonts.
... and you don't want the labels to overlap
ive figured those things out.
took me longer than i wish to tell you
04:25
None of the people trying to help you knew any of this until now though
but fast scaling goes south when looking at a dendrite compared to a jet engine
New questions: do you have a minimum font size?
font size is determined by user at time of build.
i have a page to view the images. i also have page to build and update pages.
So there's no lower bound?
Are you not concerned with the readability of the labels?
i believe its set at about 5 or 6
min font
04:27
So, does your scaling algorithm stop scaling if the font would need to be shrunk below this size?
no. label height and width are based of text font size. shrink font, outer rect shrinks
That doesn't sound quite right.
well my label is just a rectangle positioned behind text element
If the image shrinks to the point that the labels would start to overlap, you then have to shrink the label's font size, right?
yesssss
that is what collision detection function is for
like i said i have spent much time working out those kinks
04:31
Continuing that thought, as the image shrinks further, the font size will eventually hit the minimum font size. My question is whether or not the image reduction is aborted at that point? If not, then you're still dealing with an unavoidable overlap issue.
at a certain point it wont be readable anyway. say i scale down to a 4x4 inch image. its basically just a thumbnail. not useable, but you get the gist of where everything is.
I'm not really concerned with the scalability of the image as much as I am about the constraints of the algorithm that's giving you the problem.
ive locked my performance issue down to a certain area in my code. This section has nothing to do with actual re positioning of element. only getting values, calculating their new position and saving these updated positions in array. my getters setters
its a micro optimization, but it is needed
i feel
So, that brings us full circle.
have you seen iron man
04:38
What is the performance difference for a fixed number of accesses between using your getters and setters, vs closures, vs what you think was faster?
yes , all 3
i believe closures are much slower since you have to return entire array and then get index value every time you need to pull data.
there are plenty of sites that speak to benefits of using arrays but in their examples they all use global arrays
I can't help you with "I believe". I need either numbers or a pseudo-code description of the getters and setters, closure implementation, and the method you think is faster.
Global arrays are faster than arrays in any other context because the scope doesn't have to be resolved.
For everything else, scope resolution takes time.
for (var i=0; i<100; ++i)
a.b.c.d.foo =1;

will be slower than

var d = a.b.c.d;
for (var i=0; i<100; ++i)
d.foo =1;
sorry
looks like i will have to get creative on this one. where there is a will there is a way. thanks for taking the time.
I'm still willing to help
can I at least know why you don't wish to provide pseudo-code?
not sure how to pull out the function.
lemme see
05:05
ill see if i can put together a js.perf. will probably take a little time.
i believe it does come down to this line.... TbboxSave(0,i,'indexValue');
returns index value contained in a closure....TbboxSave(0,i,'copyToIndex');
inserts new value
to i need to get value as well as insert value on every iteration.
so this TbboxSave is the function being called on each iteration of the loop?
twice?
yes
text bounding box
and that 3rd parameter is a control variable telling the function what operation to perform
yes correct
I take it that the element access is isolated to TbboxSave
and that you're using it as both a getter and a setter
based on the value of that 3rd parameter.
05:10
well i can use raphael.js built in function getBBox() to access element
but instead of calling that function on every element every time page is scaled it would be nicer to store data and just perform calculations
everywhere i look i hear about benefits of caching data in array but no clear mention of how to do this in non global setting.
so you're trying to sideload each element into a cache? That explains why everything slows down with increasing element count. Closures with lots of data can get expensive when the element count goes up. Finding the right closure again is an expensive calulation
I think I can help now
Is there a single function that performs the iteration?
yes
put your array in that function.
now, do you access your original elements by index?
05:16
yes. raphael elements are stored in their own array. with raphael you cannot destroy an element. the memory is never released. so you have to reuse elements.
elements live for the life of the main page.
i simply use the number of elements i need and clear all attributes from the rest and give them a display of none.
i also give elements a display of none when changing their attributes. this means only one repaint is needed once new values are set.
same as appending elements to a document.fragment
just one question... since raphael is keeping the elements in an array of its own, why keep a duplicate array? or is it that raphael's version of the array may be sparse with useful elements?
raphael uses a set(). i believe this is what you are asking.
ok.
I get it.
So do this:
Before the first iteration of the your calculator, copy all element references you're interested in to the array. Then with each calculation run, you only need to access that array.
The only way this is going to work is if the function doing the calculation loop and the array are in a closure.
just 1 closure.
05:24
i have tried what you are talking about with using set(). each components elements all in same set. this was slow. i have not tried with regular array though. dont know why i didnt think of that. lemme give it a try.
want an example of what I mean?
set has a lot of penalties associated with it. uniqueness checks and the like...
05:39
looks like thats gonna take a little time to set up.
I don't doubt it.
well i know what ill be doing for the next hour. i can shoot you a message and let you know how it went.
Just try to abstract the function that does the updates into a function object that owns the array copy. Initialize it, then have fun calling the updater
that sound like a lead to me kind sir
hopefully a good one. Good luck.
05:42
to ask again..you have seen iron man
thanks. and good day.

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