2

lets say you are processing a bunch of data and now that will take some time (in my case I'm accessing multiple resources via AJAX and after receiving them I parse them with RegExp [that parsing is what takes the critical amount of time]).

You also would like to assure 2 things:

  • The browser does not feel frozen
  • The user has some kind of indicator

I made the following example with jQuery(UI):

JS:

  $(function() {
     $("#progressbar").progressbar({
        value: 0
     });
     $("#blub").click(function() {
        i = 0;
        while(i < 5000) {
           $("#progressbar").progressbar({
              value: (i / 5000 * 100)
           });
           i++;
        }  
     });
  });

HTML:

<div id="progressbar"></div>
<div id="blub">KLICK</div>

It seems like the browser is only redrawing its canvas when the while is completely done. Also the CPU-Usage goes as high as it can.

Is there any way to force breaks or reduce the CPU-Load?

7
  • You could set up an asynchronous loop for the regex parsing of your data.
    – Shmiddty
    Oct 2, 2012 at 16:03
  • 1
    while executes as fast as the CPU will allow, using it to update a progressbar is a bad idea.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 2, 2012 at 16:04
  • Do not use native XHR objects for these methods. Look into leveraging socket.io so you're not beating the crap out of the HTTPD threads (what little of them) you're given to use.
    – Ohgodwhy
    Oct 2, 2012 at 16:05
  • @KevinB Yes you are right. Its maybe a bad example. For my parsing entities I am using jQuerys for-each, but that results in the same problem: it takes as much cpu-time as possible. Thats why I ask
    – Gundon
    Oct 2, 2012 at 16:05
  • Just a little remark: I am NOT doing AJAX while iterating/proccessing.. All the data is available in local vars already
    – Gundon
    Oct 2, 2012 at 16:07

1 Answer 1

4

You should use requestAnimationFrame instead of a while loop to render the result after every pass.

Here's the requestAnimatonFrame polyfill that falls back to setTimeout https://gist.github.com/1579671

And here's how you would replace your while loop which does not allow the screen to refresh or render until it is done computing.

var i = 0;
animate();
function animate() {
    requestAnimationFrame(animate);
    $("#progressbar").progressbar({
         value: (i / 5000 * 100)
    });
    i++;
}
1
  • In this example you don't quit the loop. You could, though, with a simple update that only calls the rAF while progress is under 5000, change the 4th line: i <= 5000 && requestAnimationFrame(animate);
    – potench
    Nov 12, 2016 at 0:51

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.