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Similar to How to reload/refresh an element(image) in jQuery but not at the same time.

I have a webcam that saves images every 2 seconds rather than streaming. Using jQuery (or straight JS) I want to refresh just the image element.

Should be easy, but all my searches show the refresh on request.

5 Answers 5

16
setInterval(function(){
    $("#myimg").attr("src", "/myimg.jpg?"+new Date().getTime());
},2000);
2
  • Where you have "myimg.jpg" I have a JS global var set with the path, how do I integrate that? I've tried $("#myimg").attr("src", imagePath+"?"+d.getTime()); but the image disappears
    – joedborg
    Sep 7, 2011 at 16:26
  • i wrote new Date().getTime(). if you use d.getTime() you'll have to first assign it var d = new Date();
    – Andy
    Sep 7, 2011 at 16:28
3

setInterval is a timer that will execute a function everything x milliseconds

setInterval(function () {
    var d = new Date();
    $("#myimg").attr("src", "/myimg.jpg?"+d.getTime());
}, 2000);
1
  • Where you have "myimg.jpg" I have a JS global var set with the path, how do I integrate that? I've tried $("#myimg").attr("src", imagePath+"?"+d.getTime()); but the image disappears
    – joedborg
    Sep 7, 2011 at 16:26
3

You must force the browser to realod the image instead of taking it from cache. You can do it by changing the url, adding a useless parameter that changes each time, for example a timestamp.

$('img.webcam').each(function() {
    var jqt = $(this);
    var src = jqt.attr('src');
    src = src.substr(0,src.indexOf('?'));
    src += '?_ts=' + new Date().getTime();
    jqt.attr('src',src);
});

Execute this snippet inside a timer or on a click or both or whatever.

2

This should do the job:

window.setInterval(function() {
    var d = new Date();
    $("#myimg").attr("src", "/myimg.jpg?"+d.getTime());
}, 2000);
1
  • Where you have "myimg.jpg" I have a JS global var set with the path, how do I integrate that? I've tried $("#myimg").attr("src", imagePath+"?"+d.getTime()); but the image disappears
    – joedborg
    Sep 7, 2011 at 16:26
1

Add a timestamp to the image source it will refresh.

setInterval(function(){
    $("img").each(function(){
       var timeStamp = (new Date()).getTime();
       $(this).attr("src", $(this).attr("src") + timeStamp );
    });
}, 2000);
1
  • Unlike the other answers this would increase the size of the URL every 2 seconds (because you keep appending, not replacing). It wouldn't take too long before you had a URL thousands of characters long.
    – Arbiter
    Jul 3, 2013 at 20:31

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