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I've noticed that when dynamically creating a large canvas (6400x6400) that quite alot of the time nothing will be drawn on it, and when setting the canvas to a small size it works 100% of the time, however as I don't know any better, I have no other choice than to try and get the large canvas working correctly.

thisObj.oMapCanvas = jQuery( document.createElement('canvas') ).attr('width', 6400).attr('height', 6400).css('border','1px solid green').prependTo( thisObj.oMapLayer ).get(0);

// getContext and then drawing stuff here...

The purpose of the canvas is to simply draw a line between two nodes (images), which are within a div container that can be dragged around (viewport I think people call them).

What I "think" may be happening is that on a canvas resize it emptys the canvas, and that is interfering with the context drawing, as like I said previously it works all the time when the canvas is alot smaller.

Has anyone experienced this before and/or know any possible solutions?

3 Answers 3

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That is an enormous sized canvas. 6400 x 6400 x 4 bytes per pixel is 156 MB, and your implementation may need to allocate two or more buffers of that size, for double buffering, or need to allocate video memory of that size as well. It's going to take a while to allocate and clear all that memory, and you may not be guaranteed to succeed at such an allocation. Is there a reason you need such an enormous canvas? You could instead try sizing your canvas to be only as large as necessary to draw the line between those two divs, or you could try using SVG instead of a canvas.

Another possibility would be to try dividing your canvas up into large tiles, and only rendering those tiles that are actually visible on the screen. Google Maps does this with images, to only load images for the portion of the map that is currently visible (plus some extra one each side of the screen to make sure that when you scroll you won't need to wait for it to render), maintaining an illusion that there is an enormous canvas while really only rendering something a bit bigger than the window.

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  • It's for rendering a randomly generated map that's 100x100 in size with each cell being 64x64 (think of a starmap where the stars are connected via starlanes), another approach that I was tempted to go with was to create a canvas per link (line) needed, I just thought that it would be alot slower due to alot more insertions into the dom. Originally I went with the javascript drawing library wz_jsgraphics, however that made scrolling very slow due to the nature of how that renders the lines.
    – Steve
    Dec 26, 2009 at 18:38
  • I also never realised the memory requirements for doing this, which does indeed make it unfeasible. I'll have to look into doing this dynamically with SVG, thank you!
    – Steve
    Dec 26, 2009 at 18:49
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Most browsers that implement HTML5 are still in early beta - so it's quite likely they are still working the bugs out.

However, the resolution of the canvas you are trying to create is very high .. much higher than what most people's monitors can even display. Is there are reason you need it quite so large? Why not restrict the draggable area to something more in line with typical display resolutions?

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  • It's inside of a div that has overflow:hidden, and within javascript you can hold and drag the contents of that div around (basically setting the top and left attributes) so you can view parts of it within that viewport.
    – Steve
    Dec 26, 2009 at 17:34
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I had the same problem! I was trtying to use a big canvas to connect some divs. Eventually I gave up and drew a line using javascript (I drew my line using little images as pixels- I did it with divs first, but in IE the divs came out too big).

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