29

I have a button which runs a long running function when it's clicked. Now, while the function is running, I want to change the button text, but I'm having problems in some browsers like Firefox, IE.

html:

<button id="mybutt" class="buttonEnabled" onclick="longrunningfunction();"><span id="myspan">do some work</span></button>

javascript:

function longrunningfunction() {
    document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "doing some work";
    document.getElementById("mybutt").disabled = true;
    document.getElementById("mybutt").className = "buttonDisabled";

    //long running task here

    document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "done";
}

Now this has problems in firefox and IE, ( in chrome it works ok )

So I thought to put it into a settimeout:

function longrunningfunction() {
    document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "doing some work";
    document.getElementById("mybutt").disabled = true;
    document.getElementById("mybutt").className = "buttonDisabled";

    setTimeout(function() {
        //long running task here
        document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "done";
    }, 0);
}

but this doesn't work either for firefox! the button gets disabled, changes colour ( due to the application of the new css ) but the text does not change.

I have to set the time to 50ms instead of just 0ms, in order to make it work ( change the button text ). Now I find this stupid at least. I can understand if it would work with just a 0ms delay, but what would happen in a slower computer? maybe firefox would need 100ms there in the settimeout? it sounds rather stupid. I tried many times, 1ms, 10ms, 20ms...no it won't refresh it. only with 50ms.

So I followed the advice in this topic:

Forcing a DOM refresh in Internet explorer after javascript dom manipulation

so I tried:

function longrunningfunction() {
    document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "doing some work";
    var a = document.getElementById("mybutt").offsetTop; //force refresh

    //long running task here

    document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "done";
}

but it doesn't work ( FIREFOX 21). Then i tried:

function longrunningfunction() {
    document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "doing some work";
    document.getElementById("mybutt").disabled = true;
    document.getElementById("mybutt").className = "buttonDisabled";
    var a = document.getElementById("mybutt").offsetTop; //force refresh
    var b = document.getElementById("myspan").offsetTop; //force refresh
    var c = document.getElementById("mybutt").clientHeight; //force refresh
    var d = document.getElementById("myspan").clientHeight; //force refresh

    setTimeout(function() {
        //long running task here
        document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "done";
    }, 0);
}

I even tried clientHeight instead of offsetTop but nothing. the DOM does not get refreshed.

Can someone offer a reliable solution preferrably non-hacky ?

thanks in advance!

as suggested here i also tried

$('#parentOfElementToBeRedrawn').hide().show();

to no avail

Force DOM redraw/refresh on Chrome/Mac

TL;DR:

looking for a RELIABLE cross-browser method to have a forced DOM refresh WITHOUT the use of setTimeout (preferred solution due to different time intervals needed depending on the type of long running code, browser, computer speed and setTimeout requires anywhere from 50 to 100ms depending on situation)

jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/WsmUh/5/

7
  • can you turn this into a jsfiddle please? Jun 7, 2013 at 20:15
  • @Mike'Pomax'Kamermans yes i just updated my post with a jsfiddle. Jun 7, 2013 at 20:44
  • With regard to your edit, does this mean jQuery can also be part of the solution?
    – Josh
    Jun 7, 2013 at 21:40
  • Josh, yes I don't mind if jquery is part of the solution Jun 7, 2013 at 22:51
  • 3
    You don't want to have heavy processing in your main browser thread as it freezes the page. Use Web Workers to perform the task. Jun 7, 2013 at 23:08

13 Answers 13

25
+50

Webpages are updated based on a single thread controller, and half the browsers don't update the DOM or styling until your JS execution halts, giving computational control back to the browser. That means if you set some element.style.[...] = ... it won't kick in until your code finishes running (either completely, or because the browser sees you're doing something that lets it intercept processing for a few ms).

You have two problems: 1) your button has a <span> in it. Remove that, just set .innerHTML on the button itself. But this isn't the real problem of course. 2) you're running very long operations, and you should think very hard about why, and after answering the why, how:

If you're running a long computational job, cut it up into timeout callbacks (or, in 2019, await/async - see note at the end of this anser). Your examples don't show what your "long job" actually is (a spin loop doesn't count) but you have several options depending on the browsers you take, with one GIANT booknote: don't run long jobs in JavaScript, period. JavaScript is a single threaded environment by specification, so any operation you want to do should be able to complete in milliseconds. If it can't, you're literally doing something wrong.

If you need to calculate difficult things, offload it to the server with an AJAX operation (universal across browsers, often giving you a) faster processing for that operation and b) a good 30 seconds of time that you can asynchronously not-wait for the result to be returned) or use a webworker background thread (very much NOT universal).

If your calculation takes long but not absurdly so, refactor your code so that you perform parts, with timeout breathing space:

function doLongCalculation(callbackFunction) {
  var partialResult = {};
  // part of the work, filling partialResult
  setTimeout(function(){ doSecondBit(partialResult, callbackFunction); }, 10);
}

function doSecondBit(partialResult, callbackFunction) {
  // more 'part of the work', filling partialResult
  setTimeout(function(){ finishUp(partialResult, callbackFunction); }, 10);
}

function finishUp(partialResult, callbackFunction) {
  var result;
  // do last bits, forming final result
  callbackFunction(result);
}

A long calculation can almost always be refactored into several steps, either because you're performing several steps, or because you're running the same computation a million times, and can cut it up into batches. If you have (exaggerated) this:

var resuls = [];
for(var i=0; i<1000000; i++) {
  // computation is performed here
  if(...) results.push(...);
}

then you can trivially cut this up into a timeout-relaxed function with a callback

function runBatch(start, end, terminal, results, callback) {
  var i;
  for(var i=start; i<end; i++) {
    // computation is performed here
    if(...) results.push(...);      } 
  if(i>=terminal) {
    callback(results);
  } else {
    var inc = end-start;
    setTimeout(function() {
      runBatch(start+inc, end+inc, terminal, results, callback);
    },10);
  }
}

function dealWithResults(results) {
  ...
}

function doLongComputation() {
  runBatch(0,1000,1000000,[],dealWithResults);
}

TL;DR: don't run long computations, but if you have to, make the server do the work for you and just use an asynchronous AJAX call. The server can do the work faster, and your page won't block.

The JS examples of how to deal with long computations in JS at the client are only here to explain how you might deal with this problem if you don't have the option to do AJAX calls, which 99.99% of the time will not be the case.

edit

also note that your bounty description is a classic case of The XY problem

2019 edit

In modern JS the await/async concept vastly improves upon timeout callbacks, so use those instead. Any await lets the browser know that it can safely run scheduled updates, so you write your code in a "structured as if it's synchronous" way, but you mark your functions as async, and then you await their output them whenever you call them:

async doLongCalculation() {
  let firstbit = await doFirstBit();
  let secondbit = await doSecondBit(firstbit);
  let result = await finishUp(secondbit);
  return result;
}

async doFirstBit() {
  //...
}

async doSecondBit...

...
4
  • there is no option to do the work in the server, because it cannot technically be done in the server. Jun 12, 2013 at 8:23
  • i'll probably split the long running function in small settimeouts Jun 12, 2013 at 9:02
  • That might be wise; if it cannot be done at the server, then cutting it up into a callback chain with timeouts will at least unblock the browser. Jun 12, 2013 at 11:47
  • Btw, did you look into webworkers, because this does sound like the kind of thing that should either not be done at all in javascript or in a webworker which is meant to solve this limitation of JS. Jun 14, 2013 at 11:57
8

SOLVED IT!! No setTimeout()!!!

Tested in Chrome 27.0.1453, Firefox 21.0, Internet 9.0.8112

$("#btn").on("mousedown",function(){
$('#btn').html('working');}).on('mouseup', longFunc);

function longFunc(){
  //Do your long running work here...
   for (i = 1; i<1003332300; i++) {}
  //And on finish....  
   $('#btn').html('done');
}

DEMO HERE!

6
  • Devilishly clever solution, +1, :-) Is there any documentation that supports it? I mean, the setTimeout(..., 0); trick should work (and it's widely documented), but did not work for @MirrorMirror in FireFox Jun 14, 2013 at 10:34
  • 6
    This breaks standard browser behavior. Click events don't fire until after a mousedown and mouseup fire for the same element. If either occurs while the mouse is outside of the element, the click event doesn't fire. Problematic use cases: 1) Press the mouse button while within the element, move the mouse outside, then release the button. The animation runs indefinitely, but the processing never starts. 2) Press the mouse button while outside the element, move the mouse inside, then release the button. The processing runs with no visible indication that it's started. Jun 14, 2013 at 17:47
  • 1
    Well........unfortunately for the OP, he wants something without setTimeout().......this is the ONLY solution, I tried 34 different iterations, and this is the one that passed the test. Unless he's willing to use setTimeout(), or betteryet, use a WebWorker..which is definitely how I would do it.......this is the one for him. If moving the mouse outside of the button is an issue, I suggest he makes the button extra large. :)
    – Kylie
    Jun 14, 2013 at 20:32
  • @KyleK thanks for your answer, I will try to see if I can avoid the problematic cases as pointed out by Matt. I don't mind a setTimeout solution per se, I'm fine with a solution having setTimeout(..., 0) or setTimeout(...,1), what i don't want is setTimeout(..., 50/100) where i would have to put large value to take care for all browsers Jun 17, 2013 at 19:47
  • 1
    but internally jquery uses setTimeout all over -.- you're just using a framework instead, I don't see what's smart in this
    – Sebas
    Aug 2, 2016 at 15:53
6

As of 2019 one uses double requesAnimationFrame to skip a frame instead of creating a race condition using setTimeout.

function doRun() {
    document.getElementById('app').innerHTML = 'Processing JS...';
    requestAnimationFrame(() =>
    requestAnimationFrame(function(){
         //blocks render
         confirm('Heavy load done') 
         document.getElementById('app').innerHTML = 'Processing JS... done';
    }))
}
doRun()
<div id="app"></div>


As an usage example think of calculating pi using Monte Carlo in an endless loop:

using for loop to mock while(true) - as this breaks the page

function* piMonteCarlo(r = 5, yield_cycle = 10000){

  let total = 0, hits = 0, x=0, y=0, rsqrd = Math.pow(r, 2);
  
  while(true){
  
     total++;
     if(total === Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER){
      break;
     }
     x = Math.random() * r * 2 - r;
     y = Math.random() * r * 2 - r;
     
     (Math.pow(x,2) + Math.pow(y,2) < rsqrd) && hits++;
     
     if(total % yield_cycle === 0){
      yield 4 * hits / total
     }
  }
}

let pi_gen = piMonteCarlo(5, 1000), pi = 3;

for(let i = 0; i < 1000; i++){
// mocks
// while(true){
// basically last value will be rendered only
  pi = pi_gen.next().value
  console.log(pi)
  document.getElementById('app').innerHTML = "PI: " + pi
}
<div id="app"></div>

And now think about using requestAnimationFrame for updates in between ;)

function* piMonteCarlo(r = 5, yield_cycle = 10000){

  let total = 0, hits = 0, x=0, y=0, rsqrd = Math.pow(r, 2);
  
  while(true){
  
     total++;
     if(total === Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER){
      break;
     }
     x = Math.random() * r * 2 - r;
     y = Math.random() * r * 2 - r;
     
     (Math.pow(x,2) + Math.pow(y,2) < rsqrd) && hits++;
     
     if(total % yield_cycle === 0){
      yield 4 * hits / total
     }
  }
}

let pi_gen = piMonteCarlo(5, 1000), pi = 3;


function rAFLoop(calculate){

  return new Promise(resolve => {
    requestAnimationFrame( () => {
    requestAnimationFrame(() => {
      typeof calculate === "function" && calculate()
      resolve()
    })
    })
  })
}
let stopped = false
async function piDOM(){
  while(stopped==false){
    await rAFLoop(() => {
      pi = pi_gen.next().value
      console.log(pi)
      document.getElementById('app').innerHTML = "PI: " + pi
    })
  }
}
function stop(){
  stopped = true;
}
function start(){
  if(stopped){
    stopped = false
    piDOM()
  }
}
piDOM()
<div id="app"></div>
<button onclick="stop()">Stop</button>
<button onclick="start()">start</button>

3
  • I'm presuming this works because the first frame (where we want to show the messaging) occurs when the outer rAF runs, then the resource hog runs at the second frame coming from the inner rAF. Neat :). Nov 12, 2019 at 14:17
  • 1
    @JonFagence your comment made me add an example ^^
    – Estradiaz
    Nov 13, 2019 at 9:24
  • 1
    This is the BEST answer on this page for my situation. I have a heavy javascript load that blocks the UI thread for several seconds. It cannot be split up, and I would like to place a loading mask / spinner over the page while this occurs. Your solution is the only way I can accomplish this in a deterministic fashion without introducing artificial delays with guessed timeout values. Thanks. Nov 24, 2020 at 17:49
3

As described in the "Script taking too long and heavy jobs" section of Events and timing in-depth (an interesting reading, by the way):

[...] split the job into parts which get scheduled after each other. [...] Then there is a “free time” for the browser to respond between parts. It is can render and react on other events. Both the visitor and the browser are happy.

I am sure that there are many times in which a task cannot be splitted into smaller tasks, or fragments. But I am sure that there will be many other times in which this is possible too! :-)

Some refactoring is needed in the example provided. You could create a function to do a piece of the work you have to do. It could begin like this:

function doHeavyWork(start) {
    var total = 1000000000;
    var fragment = 1000000;
    var end = start + fragment;

    // Do heavy work
    for (var i = start; i < end; i++) {
        //
    }

Once the work is finished, function should determine if next work piece must be done, or if execution has finished:

    if (end == total) {
        // If we reached the end, stop and change status
        document.getElementById("btn").innerHTML = "done!";
    } else {
        // Otherwise, process next fragment
        setTimeout(function() {
            doHeavyWork(end);
        }, 0);
    }            
}

Your main dowork() function would be like this:

function dowork() {
    // Set "working" status
    document.getElementById("btn").innerHTML = "working";

    // Start heavy process
    doHeavyWork(0);
}

Full working code at http://jsfiddle.net/WsmUh/19/ (seems to behave gently on Firefox).

1
  • spot on, this is easily refactored too to most long running tasks.
    – twobob
    May 3, 2017 at 11:57
2

If you don't want to use setTimeout then you are left with WebWorker - this will require HTML5 enabled browsers however.

This is one way you can use them -

Define your HTML and an inline script (you don't have to use inline script, you can just as well give an url to an existing separate JS file):

<input id="start" type="button" value="Start" />
<div id="status">Preparing worker...</div>

<script type="javascript/worker">
    postMessage('Worker is ready...');

    onmessage = function(e) {
        if (e.data === 'start') {
            //simulate heavy work..
            var max = 500000000;
            for (var i = 0; i < max; i++) {
                if ((i % 100000) === 0) postMessage('Progress: ' + (i / max * 100).toFixed(0) + '%');
            }
            postMessage('Done!');
        }
    };
</script>

For the inline script we mark it with type javascript/worker.

In the regular Javascript file -

The function that converts the inline script to a Blob-url that can be passed to a WebWorker. Note that this might note work in IE and you will have to use a regular file:

function getInlineJS() {
    var js = document.querySelector('[type="javascript/worker"]').textContent;
    var blob = new Blob([js], {
        "type": "text\/plain"
    });
    return URL.createObjectURL(blob);
}

Setup worker:

var ww = new Worker(getInlineJS());

Receive messages (or commands) from the WebWorker:

ww.onmessage = function (e) {
    var msg = e.data;

    document.getElementById('status').innerHTML = msg;

    if (msg === 'Done!') {
        alert('Next');    
    }
};

We kick off with a button-click in this demo:

document.getElementById('start').addEventListener('click', start, false);

function start() {
    ww.postMessage('start');
}

Working example here:
http://jsfiddle.net/AbdiasSoftware/Ls4XJ/

As you can see the user-interface is updated (with progress in this example) even if we're using a busy-loop on the worker. This was tested with an Atom based (slow) computer.

If you don't want or can't use WebWorker you have to use setTimeout.

This is because this is the only way (beside from setInterval) that allow you to queue up an event. As you noticed you will need to give it a few milliseconds as this will give the UI engine "room to breeth" so-to-speak. As JS is single-threaded you cannot queue up events other ways (requestAnimationFrame will not work well in this context).

Hope this helps.

1

Update: I don't think in the long term that you can be sure of avoiding Firefox's aggressive avoidance of DOM updates without using a timeout. If you want to force a redraw / DOM update, there are tricks available, like adjusting the offset of elements, or doing hide() then show(), etc., but there is nothing very pretty available, and after a while when those tricks get abused and slow down user experience, then browsers get updated to ignore those tricks. See this article and the linked articles beside it for some examples: Force DOM redraw/refresh on Chrome/Mac

The other answers look like they have the basic elements needed, but I thought it would be worthwhile to mention that my practice is to wrap all interactive DOM-changing functions in a "dispatch" function which handles the necessary pauses needed to get around the fact that Firefox is extremely aggressive in avoiding DOM updates in order to score well on benchmarks (and to be responsive to users while browsing the internet).

I looked at your JSFiddle and customized a dispatch function the one that many of my programs rely on. I think it is self-explanatory, and you can just paste it into your existing JS Fiddle to see how it works:

$("#btn").on("click", function() { dispatch(this, dowork, 'working', 'done!'); });

function dispatch(me, work, working, done) {
    /* work function, working message HTML string, done message HTML string */
    /* only designed for a <button></button> element */
    var pause = 50, old;
    if (!me || me.tagName.toLowerCase() != 'button' || me.innerHTML == working) return;
    old = me.innerHTML;
    me.innerHTML = working;
    setTimeout(function() {
        work();
        me.innerHTML = done;
        setTimeout(function() { me.innerHTML = old; }, 1500);
    }, pause);
}

function dowork() {
        for (var i = 1; i<1000000000; i++) {
            //
        }

}

Note: the dispatching function also blocks calls from happening at the same time, because it can seriously confuse users if status updates from multiple clicks are happening together.

1

Fake an ajax request

function longrunningfunction() {
document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "doing some work";
document.getElementById("mybutt").disabled = true;
document.getElementById("mybutt").className = "buttonDisabled";
$.ajax({
    url: "/",
    complete: function () {
        //long running task here
        document.getElementById("myspan").innerHTML = "done";
    }
});}
0

Try this

function longRunningTask(){
    // Do the task here
    document.getElementById("mybutt").value = "done";
}

function longrunningfunction() {
    document.getElementById("mybutt").value = "doing some work";

    setTimeout(function() {
        longRunningTask();
    }, 1);    
}
7
  • I thought the problem was use of innerHTML that's why I recommended use of value
    – Jay Patel
    Jun 1, 2013 at 19:45
  • yes the complete html button code is : <button id="mybutt" class="buttonEnabled" onclick="longrunningfunction();"><span id="myspan">run long running function</span></button>. also updated in the initial post Jun 1, 2013 at 19:55
  • 1
    Why is there a span inside the button?
    – Jay Patel
    Jun 1, 2013 at 20:24
  • It seems so. Try removing it as it serves no purpose.
    – Jay Patel
    Jun 1, 2013 at 20:28
  • As you're updating the value of myspan instead of mybutton, DOM might not see the update. You need to update value of mybutton and get rid of the span.
    – Jay Patel
    Jun 1, 2013 at 21:17
0

Some browsers don't handle onclick html attribute good. It's better to use that event on js object. Like this:

<button id="mybutt" class="buttonEnabled">
    <span id="myspan">do some work</span>
</button>

<script type="text/javascript">

window.onload = function(){ 

    butt = document.getElementById("mybutt");
    span = document.getElementById("myspan");   

    butt.onclick = function () {
        span.innerHTML = "doing some work";
        butt.disabled = true;
        butt.className = "buttonDisabled";

        //long running task here

        span.innerHTML = "done";
    };

};

</script>

I made a fiddle with working example http://jsfiddle.net/BZWbH/2/

1
0

Have you tried adding listener to "onmousedown" to change the button text and click event for longrunning function.

0

Slightly modified your code at jsfiddle and:

$("#btn").on("click", dowork);

function dowork() {
    document.getElementById("btn").innerHTML = "working";
    setTimeout(function() {
        for (var i = 1; i<1000000000; i++) {
            //
        }
        document.getElementById("btn").innerHTML = "done!";
    }, 100);
}

Timeout set to more reasonable value 100ms did the trick for me. Try it. Try adjusting the latency to find the best value.

0

DOM buffer also exists in default browser on android, long running javascript only flush DOM buffer once, use setTimeout(..., 50) to solve it.

0

I have adapted Estradiaz's double animation frame method for async/await:

async function waitForDisplayUpdate() {
  await waitForNextAnimationFrame();
  await waitForNextAnimationFrame();
}

function waitForNextAnimationFrame() {
  return new Promise((resolve) => {
    window.requestAnimationFrame(() => resolve());
  });
}

async function main() {
  const startTime = performance.now();
  for (let i = 1; i <= 5; i++) {
    setStatus("Step " + i);
    await waitForDisplayUpdate();
    wasteCpuTime(1000);
  }
  const elapsedTime = Math.round(performance.now() - startTime);
  setStatus(`Completed in ${elapsedTime} ms`);
}

function wasteCpuTime(ms) {
  const startTime = performance.now();
  while (performance.now() < startTime + ms) {
    if (Math.random() == 0) {
      console.log("A very rare event has happened.");
    }
  }
}

function setStatus(s) {
  document.getElementById("status").textContent = s;
}

document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", main);
Status: <span id="status">Start</span>

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