I'm having trouble finding any good information on how to make a javascript(or jquery) progress bar WITH text that tells you the percentage.
I don't want a plug in, I just want to know how it works so that I can adapt it to what I need. How do you preload images and get a variable for the number of images that are preloaded. Also, how do you change html/css and-or call a function, based on the number of images that are loaded already?
<img> elements have an onload event that fires once the image has fully loaded. Therefore, in js you can keep track of the number of images that have loaded vs the number remaining using this event.
Images also have corresponding onerror and onabort events that fire when the image fails to load or the download have been aborted (by the user pressing the 'x' button). You also need to keep track of them along with the onload event to keep track of image loading properly.
Additional answer:
A simple example in pure js:
var img_to_load = [ '/img/1.jpg', '/img/2.jpg' ];
var loaded_images = 0;
for (var i=0; i<img_to_load.length; i++) {
var img = document.createElement('img');
img.src = img_to_load[i];
img.style.display = 'hidden'; // don't display preloaded images
img.onload = function () {
loaded_images ++;
if (loaded_images == img_to_load.length) {
alert('done loading images');
}
else {
alert((100*loaded_images/img_to_load.length) + '% loaded');
}
}
document.body.appendChild(img);
}
The example above doesn't handle onerror or onabort for clarity but real world code should take care of them as well.
What about using something below:
$('#btnUpload').click(function() {
var bar = document.getElementById('progBar'),
fallback = document.getElementById('downloadProgress'),
loaded = 0;
var load = function() {
loaded += 1;
bar.value = loaded;
/* The below will be visible if the progress tag is not supported */
$(fallback).empty().append("HTML5 progress tag not supported: ");
$('#progUpdate').empty().append(loaded + "% loaded");
if (loaded == 100) {
clearInterval(beginLoad);
$('#progUpdate').empty().append("Upload Complete");
console.log('Load was performed.');
}
};
var beginLoad = setInterval(function() {
load();
}, 50);
});
JSFIDDLE
You might also want to try HTML5 progress element:
<section>
<p>Progress: <progress id="p" max=100><span>0</span>%</progress></p>
<script>
var progressBar = document.getElementById('p');
function updateProgress(newValue) {
progressBar.value = newValue;
progressBar.getElementsByTagName('span')[0].textContent = newValue;
} </script>
</section>
http://www.html5tutorial.info/html5-progress.php
Related
I have a problem with a javascript. The script causes three elements on my website to be the same size. I would like to load my pictures by lazy load. This makes the rendering incorrect because the size of the elements is calculated by the script without the images. Is it possible to give the javascript a function that it will start only after the images have been loaded successfully by lazy load?
<script type="text/javascript">
jQuery(document).ready(function($){
function kb_equal_height() {
var highest_element = 0;
// Delete the height
$('.navigation-left,.site-content,.widget-area').each(function() {
$(this).removeAttr('style');
});
// Check which element is highest
$('.navigation-left,.site-content,.widget-area').each(function() {
if ($(this).height() > highest_element) {
highest_element = $(this).height();
}
});
// Assign this height to all elements
$('.navigation-left,.site-content,.widget-area').each(function() {
$(this).height(highest_element);
});
};
window.onload = kb_equal_height;
var resizeTimer;
$(window).resize(function() {
clearTimeout(resizeTimer);
resizeTimer = setTimeout(kb_equal_height, 100);
});
});
</script>
You can use image.onload to call the function when the image finished to load
You might not really see it in action here as the images probably won't take long enough to load for you to see intermediate state but it works
you'll need to clean your cache if you want to see it in action a second time as your browser will load the images from cache the second, third... times
let nbCat = 0
let div = document.getElementById("nbImg")
Array.from(document.getElementsByClassName("doAction")).forEach(img => {
img.onload = imgLoaded // your function here
})
function imgLoaded(e) {
nbCat++
div.textContent = nbCat + " cat" + (nbCat > 1? "s":"") + " loaded"
}
img {
max-height: 50vh
}
<img class="doAction" src="https://r.hswstatic.com/w_907/gif/tesla-cat.jpg">
<img class="doAction" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Cat03.jpg/1200px-Cat03.jpg">
<img class="doAction" src="https://pre00.deviantart.net/5d96/th/pre/f/2012/103/d/d/dd0d35acf8ea1817dffe7677f018b5a4-d4vzsbg.jpg">
<img class="doAction" src="https://pre00.deviantart.net/758d/th/pre/f/2018/006/2/7/tigerfieldadjusted_by_mssylviarose-dbz65qt.jpg">
<div id="nbImg">no cat loaded</div>
I have an image - image1.png. When I click a button the first time, I want it to change to image2.png. When I click the button for a second time, I want it to change to another image, image3.png.
So far I've got it to change to image2 perfectly, was easy enough. I'm just stuck finding a way to change it a second time.
HTML:
<img id="image" src="image1.png"/>
<button onclick=changeImage()>Click me!</button>
JavaScript:
function changeImage(){
document.getElementById("image").src="image2.png";
}
I'm aware I can change the image source with HTML within the button code, but I believe it'll be cleaner with a JS function. I'm open to all solutions though.
You'll need a counter to bump up the image number. Just set the maxCounter variable to the highest image number you plan to use.
Also, note that this code removes the inline HTML event handler, which is a very outdated way of hooking HTML up to JavaScript. It is not recommended because it actually creates a global wrapper function around your callback code and doesn't follow the W3C DOM Level 2 event handling standards. It also doesn't follow the "separation of concerns" methodology for web development. It's must better to use .addEventListener to hook up your DOM elements to events.
// Wait until the document is fully loaded...,
window.addEventListener("load", function(){
// Now, it's safe to scan the DOM for the elements needed
var b = document.getElementById("btnChange");
var i = document.getElementById("image");
var imgCounter = 2; // Initial value to start with
var maxCounter = 3; // Maximum value used
// Wire the button up to a click event handler:
b.addEventListener("click", function(){
// If we haven't reached the last image yet...
if(imgCounter <= maxCounter){
i.src = "image" + imgCounter + ".png";
console.log(i.src);
imgCounter++;
}
});
}); // End of window.addEventListener()
<img id="image" src="image1.png">
<button id="btnChange">Click me!</button>
For achieve your scenario we have to use of counter flag to assign a next image. so we can go throw it.
We can make it more simple
var cnt=1;
function changeImage(){
cnt++;
document.getElementById("image").src= = "image" + cnt + ".png";
}
try this
function changeImage(){
var img = document.getElementById("image");
img.src = img.src == 'image1.png' ? "image2.png" : "image3.png";
}
Just use an if statement to determine what the image's source currently is, like so:
function changeImage(){
var imageSource = document.getElementById("image").src;
if (imageSource == "image1.png"){
imageSource = "image2.png";
}
else if (imageSource == "image2.png"){
imageSource = "image3.png";
}
else {
imageSource = "image1.png";
}
}
This should make the image rotate between 3 different image files (image1.png, image2.png and image3.png). Bear in mind this will only work if you have a finite number of image files that you want to rotate through, otherwise you'd be better off using counters.
Hope this helps.
Check the below code if you make it as a cyclic:
JS
var imgArray = ["image1.png", "image2.png", "image3.png"];
function changeImage(){
var img = document.getElementById("image").src.split("/"),
src = img[img.length-1];
idx = imgArray.indexOf(src);
if(idx == imgArray.length - 1) {
idx = 0;
}
else{
idx++;
}
document.getElementById("image").src = imgArray[idx];
}
html
<button onclick=changeImage();>Click me!</button>
function changeImage(){
document.getElementById("image").attr("src","image2.png");
}
(not duplicate, because not find exactly/easy solution)
I'm trying to execute JS after all images completely loaded. My goal is, when all images finish load completely, then removeClass my-loader and addClass visible to main-slider div.
HTML:
<div class='main-slider my-loader'>
<img src="https://unsplash.it/200/300/">
<img src="https://unsplash.it/200/300/">
<img src="https://unsplash.it/200/300/">
</div>
Execute below js when all images completely loaded
$(".main-slider").removeClass("my-loader").addClass("visible");
Tried this js :
But not works properly on my site, problem is when i clear browser cache, then it works/execute! when i reload page then next time it's not works/execute! It only works when i clear browser cache.
var img = $('.main-slider img')
var count = 0
img.each(function(){
$(this).load(function(){
count = count + 1
if(count === img.length) {
$('.main-slider').removeClass('my-loader').addClass('visible')
}
});
});
Any simple solution? Thanks in advance.
jQuery provides a way to register a callback for the window load event which will fire when the entire page, including images and iframes, are loaded.
Reference: https://learn.jquery.com/using-jquery-core/document-ready/
Your code should look something like:
$( window ).load(function () {
var img = $('.main-slider img')
var count = 0
img.each(function(){
$(this).load(function(){
count = count + 1
if(count === img.length) {
$('.main-slider').removeClass('my-loader').addClass('visible')
}
});
});
});
Here's how to do this, using Deferreds and native handlers, and calling the onload handler if the image is cached in older browsers etc.
var img = $('.main-slider img');
var defs = img.map(function(){
var def = new Deferred();
this.onload = def.resolve;
this.onerror = def.reject;
if (this.complete) this.onload();
return def.promise();
});
$.when.apply($, defs).then(function() {
$('.main-slider').removeClass('my-loader').addClass('visible')
});
I have this script which should show the text "Loading..." while images are loading, then change the text to "loaded" when all images are loaded. I added a button to load new images to make sure that it works for dynamically loaded images as well.
This works perfectly in Chrome but in Firefox the "Loading..." text never appears. I have no idea why this would be. The page begins loading and not all images are loaded so it should create the text "Loading.." but it doesn't. Then when all images are done loading the text "Loading" appears.
I just don't get why one message would appear and the other wouldn't. Especially because there are no qualifications that have to be met before creating the "Loading..." text, it should just fire automatically.
jsfiddle Example | Full Page Example
$(document).ready(function() {
var checkComplete = function() {
if($('img').filter(function() {return $('img').prop('complete');}).length == $('img').length) {
$('.status').text('Loaded');
} else {
$('.status').text('Loading...');
}
};
$('img').on('load',function() {
checkComplete();
});
$('#button').click(function() {
$('img.a').attr('src' , 'http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8545/8675107979_ee12611e6e_o.jpg');
$('img.b').attr( 'src' , 'http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8382/8677371836_651f586c99_o.jpg');
checkComplete();
});
checkComplete();
});
You have several issues in the code.
First off, the checkComplete() function is not written correctly. It should be this:
var checkComplete = function() {
var imgs = $('img');
if(imgs.filter(function() {return this.complete;}).length == imgs.length) {
$('.status').text('Loaded');
} else {
$('.status').text('Loading...');
}
};
The main fix here is that the filter callback needs to refer to this.complete, not to $('img').prop('complete') because you are trying to filter a single item at a time.
Second off, you are relying on both .complete and .load working correctly AFTER you've changed the .src value. This is explicitly one of the cases where they do not work properly in all browsers.
The bulletproof way to work around this is to create a new image object for the new images, set the onload handler before you set the .src value and when both onload handlers have fired, you will know that both new images are loaded and you can replace the once you have in the DOM with the new ones.
Here is a version that works in FF:
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#button').click(function() {
var imgA = new Image();
var imgB = new Image();
imgA.className = "a";
imgB.className = "b";
var loaded = 0;
imgA.onload = imgB.onload = function() {
++loaded;
if (loaded == 2) {
$("img.a").replaceWith(imgA);
$("img.b").replaceWith(imgB);
$('.status').text('Loaded');
}
}
// the part with adding now to the end of the URL here is just for testing purposes to break the cache
// remove that part for deployment
var now = new Date().getTime();
imgA.src = 'http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8545/8675107979_ee12611e6e_o.jpg?' + now;
imgB.src = 'http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8382/8677371836_651f586c99_o.jpg?' + now;
$('.status').text('Loading...');
});
});
Working demo: http://jsfiddle.net/jfriend00/yy7GX/
If you want to preserve the original objects, you can use the newly created objects only for preloading the new images and then change .src after they've been preloaded like this:
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#button').click(function() {
var imgA = new Image();
var imgB = new Image();
var loaded = 0;
imgA.onload = imgB.onload = function() {
++loaded;
if (loaded == 2) {
$("img.a")[0].src = imgA.src;
$("img.b")[0].src = imgB.src;
$('.status').text('Loaded');
}
}
// the part with adding now to the end of the URL here is just for testing purposes to break the cache
// remove that part for deployment
var now = new Date().getTime();
imgA.src = 'http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8545/8675107979_ee12611e6e_o.jpg?' + now;
imgB.src = 'http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8382/8677371836_651f586c99_o.jpg?' + now;
$('.status').text('Loading...');
});
});
Working demo of this version: http://jsfiddle.net/jfriend00/ChSQ5/
From the jQuery API .load method
Caveats of the load event when used with images
A common challenge developers attempt to solve using the `.load()` shortcut is to execute a function when an image (or collection of images) have completely loaded. There are several known caveats with this that should be noted. These are:
It doesn't work consistently nor reliably cross-browser
It doesn't fire correctly in WebKit if the image src is set to the same src as before
It doesn't correctly bubble up the DOM tree
Can cease to fire for images that already live in the browser's cache
I'm working on making a JS script that will go in the header div and display a few pictures. I looked into JQuery Cycle, but it was out of my league. The code I wrote below freezes the browser, should I be using the for loop with the timer var?
<script type="text/JavaScript" language="JavaScript">
var timer;
for (timer = 0; timer < 11; timer++) {
if (timer = 0) {
document.write('<img src="images/one.png">');
}
if (timer = 5) {
document.write('<img src="images/two.png">');
}
if (timer = 10) {
document.write('<img src="images/three.png">');
}
}
</script>
Thanks!
Assuming you want a script to rotate images and not just write them to the page as your code will do, you can use something like this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title></title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="target"></div>
<script>
var ary = ["images/one.png","images/two.png","images/three.png"];
var target = document.getElementById("target");
setInterval(function(){
target.innerHTML = "<img src=\""+ary[0]+"\" />";
ary.push(ary.shift());
},2000);
</script>
</body>
</html>
Of course the above code has no effects (like fading) which jQuery will give yous, but it also doesn't require loading the entire jQuery library for something so basic.
How about just running the script after the page loads?
<script>
// in <head> //
function load() {
var headDiv = document.getElementById("head");
var images = ["images/one.png", "images/two.png"];
for(var i = 0; i<images.length; i++) {
image = document.createElement("img");
image.src = images[i];
headDiv.appendChild(image);
}
}
</script>
Then use <body onload="load();"> to run the script.
Edit
To add in a delay loading images, I rewrote the code:
<script>
// in <head> //
var displayOnLoad = true; // Set to true to load the first image when the script runs, otherwise set to false to delay before loading the first image
var delay = 2.5; // seconds to delay between loading images
function loadImage(url) {
image = document.createElement("img");
image.src = images[i];
headDiv.appendChild(image);
}
function load() {
var headDiv = document.getElementById("head");
var images = ["images/one.png", "images/two.png"];
for(var i = 0; i<images.length; i++) {
setTimeout(loadImage(images[i]), (i+displayOnLoad)*(delay*1000));
}
}
</script>
Set displayOnLoad = false; if you want to wait the specified delay before loading the first image. The delay is set in seconds. I recommend waiting over a single second between images, as they may take some time to download (depending on the user's internet speed).
As with the first snippet, I haven't tested the code, so please tell me if an error occurs, and I will take a look.
Since you used the jquery tag on your question, I assume you are OK with using jQuery. In which case, you can do something like this:
In your static HTML, include the img tag and set its id to something (in my example, it's set to myImg) and set its src attribute to the first image, e.g.:
<img id="myImg" src="images/one.png">
Next, use jQuery to delay execution of your script until the page has finished loading, then use setTimeout to create a further delay so that the user can actually spend a few seconds looking at the image before it changes:
<script>
var imgTimeoutMsecs = 5000; // Five seconds between image cycles
$(function() {
// Document is ready
setTimeout(function() {
// We will get here after the first timer expires.
// Change the image src property of the existing img element.
$("#myImg").prop("src", "images/two.png");
setTimeout(function() {
// We will get here after the second, nested, timer expires.
// Again, change the image src property of the existing img element.
$("#myImg").prop("src", "images/three.png");
}, imgTimeoutMsecs);
}, imgTimeoutMsecs);
});
</script>
Of course, that approach doesn't scale very well, so if you are using more than three images total, you want to modify the approach to something like this:
var imgTimeoutMsecs = 5000; // Five seconds between image cycles
// Array of img src attributes.
var images = [
"images/one.png",
"images/two.png",
"images/three.png",
"images/four.png",
"images/five.png",
];
// Index into images array.
var iCurrentImage = 0;
function cycleImage() {
// Increment to the next image, or wrap around.
if (iCurrentImage >= images.length) {
iCurrentImage = 0;
}
else {
iCurrentImage += 1;
}
$("#myImg").prop("src", images[iCurrentImage]);
// Reset the timer.
setTimeout(cycleImages, imgTimeoutMsecs);
}
$(function() {
// Document is ready.
// Cycle images for as long as the page is loaded.
setTimeout(cycleImages, imgTimeoutMsecs);
});
There are many improvements that can be made to that example. For instance, you could slightly simplify this code by using setInterval instead of setTimer.
The code you've provided simply iterates through the for loop, writing the images to the browser as it does so. I suggest you take a look at JavaScript setTimeout function.
JS Timing