I have some code for a CMS that allows a user to author content. I want to show a preview for text typed in a corresponding textarea (much like here in stakeoverflow). When the page is first loaded, the textarea is already populated and JavaScript is used to update the preview. Once the DOM for the preview section is fully updated, further post-processing is performed on the preview section.
I found the question jQuery/Javascript - How to wait for manipulated DOM to update before proceeding with function of interest, but it's answer relies on setTimeout() which I have found somewhat problematic in the past since it's not clear how many seconds to pause before execution.
About 50% of the time, my post-processing fired prematurely because the DOM hadn't finished updating. To fix the problem, I have tried using jQuery's Callbacks queue mechanism.
What is the best way to ensure that the dynamically modified DOM is loaded first before post-processing should start?
E.g.,
// using the provided source content, update the DOM indicated by
// the destination css selector string
function updatePreview(cssSelectorDst, content){
$(cssSelectorDst).html(content);
console.log("preview updated");
}
// if a <ul> appears at the beginning of the content, designate it
// as a keypoints section
function updateKeypoints(cssSelectorDst){
...
console.log("keypoints updated");
}
// update preview section using content from iframe (using tinyMCE)
function updateFromIframe(iframeSelector, cssSelectorSrc, cssSelectorDst){
// gather source data
var iframe = $(iframeSelector);
var content = $(iframe).contents().find(cssSelectorSrc).html();
// set up callbacks to ensure proper order and completion of actions
var callbacks = $.Callbacks();
callbacks.add(updatePreview);
callbacks.add(updateKeypoints);
callbacks.fire(cssSelectorDst, content);
}