I am trying to write a JavaScript script that is "overlayed" on top of a Facebook page. It uses DOMContentLoaded to detect when content is loaded, then adds some extra stuff in. However, because Facebook doesn't actually "reload" the page when going to a new page (it just uses AJAX), the DOMContentLoaded handler doesn't run again, even though there is new stuff to look through.

Anyway, to detect the change, I thought about using onhashchange since Facebook used to change the page's hash, but in Firefox 4 (I need to support Firefox 3 and later with this, but no other browsers), Facebook doesn't change the hash anymore and in pre-Firefox 3.6 there is no onhashchange.

I thought about using DOMNodeInserted, but would that really slow down the page? (I really can't have any slowdowns in this script.)

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Has anyone else tried to implement DOMNodeInserted? Was speed/responsiveness a problem? (I do have a pretty big callback function) – jakey Dec 26 '10 at 22:44
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For lightweight pages it generally doesn't have noticable effect. However, on bulky pages (I tried this on gmail) it makes that really really slow that I cannot even compose a message smoothly. And that event was added to a very simple span element which just had a single link in that. The events like DOMNodeInserted and DOMSubTreeModified are real show stoppers.

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you might want to monitor the windows.history object, see the following answer, on how facebook uses it to update pages: "Redirect" page without refresh (Facebook photos style)

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