I created a web page for viewing images. This page has some other code that gets included that I did not write. The page loads 40 small images upon load. Then the user will scroll down and additional pages of 40 images can be loaded via ajax. Once I get to 15-20 pages, I notice the page begins to slow significantly. I check app counters and it can go up to 100% cpu and memory can go over 3GB. Then I will inevitably get the modal that JQuery is taking too long to execute, asking me if I want to stop executing the script. Now I realize that a page with up to 800 images is a big load, but the issue with JQuery suggests to me that some code may also be iterating over this larger and larger group of dom objects. It almost appears to get exponentially slower as I pass 15 pages or so. Once I get to 20 pages it becomes almost unusable.
First of all, is it even possible to run a page efficiently, even with minimal JS, when you have this many images? Secondly, is there a recommended way to "trace" JS and see what kinds of functions are getting executed to help determine what is the most likely culprit? This is most important to me - is there a good way to do in Firebug?
Thanks :)
EDIT - I found my answer. I had some older code which was being used to replace images that failed to load with a generic image. This code was using Jquery's .each operator and thus was iterating over the entire page and each new ajax addition every time the page loaded. I am going to set a class for the images that need to be checked in CSS so that the ajax-loaded images are unaffected.