If this can be detected - is there a possibility to influence colors by CSS classes or JavaScript?
With the dark reader extension, it is also possible to submit adjustments. Hope that it is also possible here, if nothing else could change it.
Samsung Internet does strange things with colors in night mode. If you’re aware of them, you can sort of workaround any issues. I’ve not found a way to detect it, though. The color filtering takes place late in the rendering process so APIs aren’t updated. The obvious methods (such as window.getComputedStyle) returns original colors.
Related
I'm having a issue which is hard to debug. I'm using a Javascript library (the JQuery Flexslider plugin) in a number of different places on my site. It's all working fine except for one particular phone where it doesn't work and slows down everything on the page.
So far, I've only seen it happen on this one device. Other devices of the same type do not have the issue. This person has an iOS that's a few versions out of date and not much memory, so I think it's a memory issue.
An old hack was to move the carousel element that has the issue on the page with Javascript, but I want to find and fix the root issue.
How can I start debugging this? I'm not sure how to test for a memory issue on a device.
If you're on a Mac, then you can plug in and use remote debugging via Safari, where you'll have access to the tools, including the profiler (not sure the state of Safari support in Windows). There are numerous resources for showing how to remotely debug a device, unless it is a really old version of iOS you should be fine, you’ll have to enable the develop menu via settings but after that its plain sailing if you know your debugging tools.
I'd agree that it doesnt really sound like a memory issue, although jQuery tends to be hungry in that respect, I dont know the plugin in question but the quality of plugins is hugely variable in jQuery-land. Old phones and old versions of jQuery certainly never played well together.
When you say one phone, you mean one type of phone + iOS version? The question isnt clear, its almost reads like you have 2 identical phones/os's where 1 works and 1 does not.
If you use Chrome you can use the Heap profiler
First open your developer tool and start recording.
Next start using your page and try to replicate your issue, stop recording and review the stats.
This is likely not a memory issue, but a cpu issue. The way jQuery does animation is processor constrained on older dvices. Factors that are easiest to handle include:
size of the page (html length and complexity)
animation steps, length, and complexity
You have a couple of options here, but the simple answer is you are asking too much of the older processor. Assuming you are using this plugin http://www.woothemes.com/flexslider/ you could try disabling or simplifying some of the transition effects. animation and animationSpeed would be the first I would suggest.
If you are interested in not changing the experience for most users you could consider tying into the start and end functions on the callback api and checking the time it took to perform the first transition, then reinitialize a simpler version of the slideshow for that device.
The hard thing here is there isn't really a right answer. If one of the above options doesn't fix it you're likely looking at choosing/building a different slideshow, degrading the experience for everyone, or determining the best way you feel comfortable with choosing who gets the degraded experience.
I have a problem with image quality in Firefox: Firefox seems
to zoom "everything" per default so some images really look
fuzzy while in chrome their quality is perfect!
I found out, that there is a setting in Firefox, which resolves the problem:
"View->Zoom->Zoom Text only".
Do you know a way to force Firefox to use this setting for a special
website (using javascript)??
Thanks a lot
Bye
No, because that's a setting for users, who may have poor eyesight and want to actually see the images on your site. It's not for you to make that decision on their behalf.
I have been working on an experiment to render HTML into a canvas image, by having javascript read all the necessary information from the loaded DOM. As canvas lacks many of the standard parts of CSS, especially when it comes to text formatting, a lot of work arounds and performance intense processes need to be done (letter-spacing for one). The intent is and never will be to make a fool proof HTML renderer, as it simply won't be possible, but instead try and make as accurate as it can be.
For the sample pages, Google Chrome usually loads them significantly faster than FF. However, for some pages (usually the bigger ones), Chrome completely freezes, where as Firefox loads them fine. Now, I have been trying to pinpoint where exactly things go haywire, but haven't had much luck as it doesn't end up outputting anything in Chrome.
Does Chrome have some limit of how many canvas draws can be performed within a certain time span, or how much system resources a page can use? How can I start untangling the bottleneck if I can't get any sort of feedback from the page at all (as it just hangs up)?
Examples (what it should do, is render a canvas image on top of the page, which should look more or less same than the actual HTML page. You can toggle the canvas image (show/hide) by clicking it. Please don't open them either if you got unsaved work in your browsers, as it may end up hanging them as well.):
simple test, works fine in FF/Chrome
another simple test, works fine in FF/Chrome
Complete page, works fine in FF/Chrome
Complete page, only works in FF < 4, Chrome freezes
They all use the same js which can be found here.
I am not looking for a blazing fast script, as with the type of emulation this renders the images, I don't think it could even be done. Simply trying to find ways to make it perhaps slightly more efficient, without losing any of its current functionality.
Where to begin?
Break it down.
Use the same example and cut how much you do it it (your rendering code) in half. Does it still not work? In half again, etc. Did it work? Put back half of what you took out.
As in, get rid of all attempted text rendering, or all border/padding code. Just comment it out. Does it work then?
Or try just commenting out ctx.drawImage(img,x,y); on line 199 and nothing else. Does it work then?
If you're lucky you'll be able to determine a critical point where Chrome is spending a lot of time doing something.
Have you tried using Chrome's built-in performance profiler?
The problem appeared to be with the css attribute background-repeat, and specifically repeat-x. Commenting out
for(bgx=(x+background_position_left);bgx<=w;){
drawImage(image,bgx,(y+background_position_top));
bgx = bgx+image.width;
}
Fixed the issue at least for chrome, and looking at that it most likely was an endless loop as Kinlan proposed, but why exactly it gets stuck only on newer versions of FF and chrome is something I'll need to look more in detail (most likely not having the image.width available yet, or something similar).
I'm making a small game using the HTML5 canvas element. It works great, except that it has a scrolling background with obvious tearing happening in Firefox and Chromium browsers in Ubuntu. I'm pretty sure it's buffered because there isn't any of the flickering I'd expect; just tearing. Is there any way to work around this or time rendering to right after the last screen refresh?
Currently there is no way to control the actual repainting of a canvas element(which if there was, could actually help in increasing performance I guess). So one can only hope that the browser actually does something intelligent, rather than screwing up like in your case.
I myself have quite some experience with the canvas element and know of its quirks. I ran into some kind of "repaint lag" several times by now, where obviously the actual numbers behind the scenes are correct and "smooth", but the graphics still have a somewhat "jumpy" behavior, which in fact is really annoying.
Only thing I can imagine that could have an effect in your case, is activating VSync in the driver settings of your Graphics Card.
If you'd like to provide a link to your game that might be helpful too, since I'm also running Ubuntu here.
I am thinking as a challenge i should write a javascript based game. I want sound, images and input. A background to simulate a screen (like 640x480 with all my images in it) would be useful to separate the rest of the page from the 'game'. What should i look at?
Some things i would need
Framecontrol. A way to get the current time (or delta).
Image, displaying it and moving it. How do i display full image. Knowing pixel access may be cool.
Input A way to lock it in a box (like flash does) is cool.
Sound play simple sounds on demand (like when i get a hit). Several sounds at once would be great
Bottlenecks. What are things that will kill the CPU?
Restrictions. What cant i do? I hear i cant 'sleep' to wait. I must set a callback
Good or best pratice. What are good things i can do to either keep speed up or to lower glitch or compatibility problems.
I'm going to answer this looking at things from a mootools javascript perspective:
Framecontrol. A way to get the current time (or delta).
periodical()
Image, displaying it and moving it. How do i display full image.
setStyles()
Input A way to lock it in a box (like
flash does) is cool.
Plain old CSS
Sound play simple sounds on demand
(like when i get a hit).
Swiff, remote();
Bottlenecks. What are things that will
kill the CPU?
Internet Explorer.
Restrictions.
3D ... ?
What are good things i can do ... to
lower glitch or compatibility
problems.
Use a framework.
As a starting point, you may want to write it for Opera, as Opera provides a game canvas that will help you out.
For some examples of games in javascript:
http://dev.opera.com/articles/view/3d-games-with-canvas-and-raycasting-part/
http://my.opera.com/WebApplications/blog/show.dml/200788
This one is interesting, it is demos of games using the canvas element.
http://www.canvasdemos.com/tag/games/
The best way to see where the problems are is to start writing the game, and then you will see what may be a problem. By looking at demos you can get an idea what performance issues they encountered. For example, a full 3D Doom game will have problems, but, as the first article above explains, there are some ways to optimize for javascript.
Once you get it working with Opera, then you can look at Firefox 3.5+ and Safari, as well as Chrome, and see if you can make some changes to have it work on those. How many platforms it works on depends on how much work you want to do for it. For a proof-of-concept pick the easiest browser for your task.
The best place to start would be to get very familiar with the <canvas> tag (it allows you to draw anything on screen)
This may help a lot:
http://benfirshman.com/projects/jsnes/
its an online NES emulator that renders everything on screen - the source is also available
Hope that helps =)