You can't call document.write
after the page is loaded. If you want to add something to the page, you must call DOM manipulation functions like document.createElement (see example).
But what you do in your function doesn't look like preloading but rather like direct insertion of images in the page.
If you want to preload images, that is to ask the browser to cache them so that they are instantly available later, then you'd better use XmlHttpRequest
instead of creating Image
elements. Issuing XmlHttpRequest
requests doesn't make the browser display a hourglass and the user doesn't feel like something is happening.
I made a small "library" last week-end just for this : easily preload resources.
var preload = (function(){
var queue = [], nbActives = 0;
function bip(){
if (queue.length==0 || nbActives>=4) return;
nbActives++;
var req = new XMLHttpRequest(), task=queue.shift();
req.open("GET", task.src, true);
req.onload = function () {
nbActives--;
bip();
if (task.callback) task.callback(task.src);
};
req.send();
}
return function(src, priority, callback) {
queue[priority?'unshift':'push']({src:src, callback:callback});
bip();
}
})();
Usage :
preload('path/to/file.png'); // preload the file
preload('path/to/file.png', true); // preload the file with high priority
preload('path/to/file.png', false, callback); // preload the file and be notified when it's finished
Github repository : https://github.com/Canop/preload