3

Hello this is based very closely on:

jquery loop through different backgrounds

This solution did work for me, however I do not want the background's to change on document ready - they should be triggered by a function. For some reason this makes the backgrounds change too fast, they flicker 3 at once so it looks like the loop is over running somewhere:

function run()
{
// Set multicolour backgrounds
window.setInterval( multicolour(), 3000);
}

var colour = 0;
var colours = Array('', 'pink', 'red', 'green', 'light');

function multicolour()
{
    colour = (colour+1) % colours.length ;
    $('body').attr('id', colours[colour]);
    console.log(colour);
}

FYI the console log shows the colour flickering 3 times every 3 seconds instead of changing once every 3 seconds. Help?

5 Answers 5

2

Use a recursive setTimeout and use a common timer variable that would be overwritten by unintentional code overwrites.

window._timers = {
  changeBackground : null
};

var colour = 0;
var colours = Array('', 'pink', 'red', 'green', 'light');

function multicolour()
{
    colour = (colour+1) % colours.length ;
    $('body').attr('id', colours[colour]);

    // Set multicolour backgrounds
    clearTimeout(window._timers.changeBackground);
    window._timers.changeBackground = setTimeout(multicolour, 3000);
}

Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/FgkWx/

0
2

Couple of syntax issues. You need to pass a function reference to window.setInterval

I also cleaned up your array declaration. I don't have jQuery so I didn't attempt to run this code though.

function run()
{
  // Set multicolour backgrounds
  window.setInterval( multicolour, 3000);
}

var colour = 0;
var colours = ['', 'pink', 'red', 'green', 'light'];

function multicolour()
{
  colour = (colour+1) % colours.length ;
  $('body').attr('id', colours[colour]);
  console.log(colour);
}

Hm.... trying this one that doesn't pollute the global space: This uses some more advanced Javascript methods, but this way 'colour' and 'colours' don't leak into the global space and pollute things.

var changeBackground = (function() {

  var colour = 0;
  var colours = ['', 'pink', 'red', 'green', 'light'];

  return function() {
    colour = (colour+1) % colours.length ;
    document.body.id =  colours[colour];
    console.log(colour);

  };

}());

window.setInterval( changeBackground, 3000);
2
  • Thanks although the problem still remains, it flickers through colours every 3 seconds instead of just changing to the next colour Aug 31, 2012 at 16:10
  • I'd have to see the rest of your code... I don't know where/how run is called, for instance. Do you have a public page or a fiddle? Aug 31, 2012 at 16:12
0

Your original question's answer had a (correct) recursive call you were missing:

setTimeout(changeBackground, 2000); // called from changeBackground()

Your example here does NOT have multicolour() calling itself recursively using setTimeout

1
0

You are invoking the callback function in the setInterval declaration:

window.setInterval( multicolour(), 3000);

Try this:

window.setInterval( multicolour, 3000);
0

It will work like this:

var colour = 0;
var colours = Array('', 'pink', 'red', 'green', 'light');

function multicolour(){
    colour = (colour+1) % colours.length ;
    $('body').attr('id', colours[colour]);
    console.log(colour);
}

setInterval( multicolour, 3000);

You need to pass a function reference to the setInterval function, not the function's return value.

Working fiddle

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