I am, frankly, a bit disturbed at many of the answers here. I'd say all of them are terrible. Although I share the skeptical reaction of the various top respondents, many answers give "solutions" that won't display anything at all to a user who has JavaScript disabled, and many others rely on a customized on-page loading notice, while signaling to the browser that the page is already loaded.
As a user, I hate both of these outcomes, so as a web-developer, I'd say these are both "non-solutions". You never want to anger your userbase and the solutions given here will anger a lot of users. I especially hate these approaches because if the user opens a webpage in the background in a new tab, the browser will display the page as loaded but the user might click over to it to find that it isn't loaded.
Independently of your question here, best practice is to make as much of your site work without JavaScript as possible, and best practice is to use the browser's built-in loading signals and never signal to the browser that the page is loaded before it actually is. So really, the only good way to do this is to make your page load so fast that there is never any moment of the user waiting.
The best way to achieve what you want is avoid use of Javascript to load elements of the page, and then optimize the page intensely. Here are the components of this approach:
- Have JavaScript on the page if you like, but don't use it to load or otherwise modify any DOM elements after the initial request is fulfilled by the server. Use JavaScript to modify elements of the page only later, such as if triggered by user input, or perhaps to refresh an element after some time, but not in any way related to the page's initial loading. I.e. use JavaScript for what it was designed for (to make webpages interactive) and don't use it to do what HTML was designed for (to make the webpage in the first place.)
- Avoid the use of any heavy JavaScript libraries and include as little JavaScript as possible. Never include JavaScript files generically, i.e. only include specific files / libraries in specific pages where you need them.
- Specify the width and height of any images in the page code itself, so that the browser can know the exact layout before the image loaded. This reduces any "choppiness" as the page loads, i.e. elements moving around as the browser resizes the boxes in which images of unspecified width are contained.
- Ensure that image files are in the exact dimensions being displayed on the page and are not being downsized by the browser. This minimizes file size and also minimizes CPU work the user's computer needs to do to resize images, both of which can affect load time.
- Optimize the compression of images, which includes using a good lossy format like JPG and lowering the compression level to as low as you can go without affecting perception. Use lossless formats like PNG only where necessary and ideally keep them small in dimension so the filesize is also small.
- Focus the intensity of your optimization efforts on any elements that load "above the fold" on a typical page, as these are what is going to affect what the user sees. Users rarely scroll down instantly, so if elements lower down on the page load a bit slower, almost no one will notice. But still optimize these lower elements reasonably because they also affect server load, bandwidth, and user CPU load.
- If you use any elements at all in your page that are potentially very slow to load due to reasons beyond your control, such as content pulled from another server (ads, social media widgets, integrations with other websites, etc.), compartmentalize these in an element of fixed size, and ideally place it below the fold.
- Avoid auto-ads, page-modifying AI (like Ezoic), or any other external add-ins that necessarily breaks or undermines one or more of these recommendations. For example, auto-ads are terrible because they rely on loading an external resource,they usually have heavy javascript libraries, and they also modify the page layout. Even the best-designed auto-ads are going to completely undermine all your other optimization efforts.
- If you are running a company with multiple developers, quickly jettison any developers who are not fully committed to a lightweight, fast-loading web design. Ideally, don't ever hire such people to begin with. A lot of people get really vested in a certain philosophy or style of development that is at odds with lightweight design. The world would be a better place if these people were in a different line of work, rather than designing webpages.
So you've optimized your page.
This produces the outcome that, if the user clicks the link directly, they'll see the content above the fold fully loaded immediately or nearly-immediately, worst-case-scenario being that a couple images fill in in a second or two. By the time they scroll down, everything else will already be loaded. Any truly-slow-to-load content, such as Google Analytics tracking or other third-party services, will not be central to the appearance of the webpage itself, so the user will see a fully-loaded page even if there are still a few invisible elements loading behind the scenes.
On the other hand, if the user loads the link in a background tab, it will display as loading to the browser, showing the animated symbol in the tab, until it is truly fully loaded. Once it displays as loaded in the tab, if they click it, it will be fully loaded.
In addition, you will have made the page load really fast, which is a good thing in and of itself.
This is a win-win. The user sees a full-loaded page nearly instantly, there is almost never any waiting while looking at a half-displayed page, the loading symbol works as expected when loading a tab in the background, and on top of this you've netted a ton of side-benefits like reduced bandwidth and server CPU load, not to mention lessening the load on the user's CPU as well. (Many users HATE when your page cranks their CPU, and rightfully so.)
So yeah, your choice what to do, but there is only one real solution here and it is lightweight, efficient web design.