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I'm polling for upload progress of [sometimes large] entities. Within the first minute, I can be chatty with my upload service for status updates, but after the first minute, I can afford to ask less often.

Must i destroy the existing $interval and create a new one with a longer interval time value? or can I update the existing $interval's time parameter somehow?

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  • 1
    In that case you should go with $timeout...
    – PSL
    Dec 12, 2014 at 18:57
  • i'm running a specific call once per second. thats a perfect use case for $interval. but if i determine at some point that this interval may end up running for an hour, and not 5 minutes, then I dont need to be as chatty with my backend. why would I instantiate a new timeout over and over again just to emulate $interval?
    – Kristian
    Dec 12, 2014 at 19:02
  • 1
    What is your concern here? Is this a micro-optimization? It shouldn't be that costly to use a self-restarting $timeout or to stop an $interval and start a new one with a new time value.
    – JLRishe
    Dec 12, 2014 at 19:10
  • @Kristian can I update the existing $interval's time parameter somehow? --> Which is not possible, what you are passing is a primitive number. Must i destroy the existing $interval and create a new one with a longer interval time value --> How is it better than just creating a timeout (unless you are not doing this very often)?
    – PSL
    Dec 12, 2014 at 19:18
  • because i'm not doing this very often. i'm going run the call about 500 times... and i only need to update the interval time once after some threshold is met. lol. its OK guys, i have my answer now -- just destroy and instantiate new interval...
    – Kristian
    Dec 12, 2014 at 19:34

1 Answer 1

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There are many options. I saw in the comments a suggestion for using settimeout which you might try. I have another suggestion it is possible to clear an interval and set another one. Code:

var interval = window.setInterval(function(){alert('test');}, 3000);

Here is the other half:

<input type='button' value='test' onclick='clearTheInterval()'>

function clearTheInterval()
{
window.clearInterval(interval);
}

Then you can have some script to set the interval again. Tell me if this code doesn't work and I will come back and fix it because I'm on the phone right now.

2
  • this isn't technically correct since you're not using angular's $interval method, which is what the question was about. but the gist of it is correct. thanks
    – Kristian
    Dec 12, 2014 at 19:37
  • I'm not familiar with angular js. I don't think it was mentioned in the question. Could you explain to me what angular js is?
    – www139
    Dec 12, 2014 at 23:22

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