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jQuery loading images with complete callback

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-21 22:53 出处:网络
I saw a comment on Ben Nadel\'s blog where Stephen Rushing posted a loader, but I can\'t figure out how I can pass the selectors and parameter...

I saw a comment on Ben Nadel's blog where Stephen Rushing posted a loader, but I can't figure out how I can pass the selectors and parameter...

I think I also need a completeCallback and errorCallback functions?

function imgLoad(img, completeCallback, errorCallback) {
    if (img != null && completeCallback != null) {
        var loadWatch = setInterval(watch, 500);
        fu开发者_如何学运维nction watch() {
            if (img.complete) {
                clearInterval(loadWatch);
                completeCallback(img);
            }
        }
    } else {
        if (typeof errorCallback == "function") errorCallback();
    }
}
// then call this from anywhere
imgLoad($("img.selector")[0], function(img) {
    $(img).fadeIn();
});

HTML:

<a href="#" class="tnClick" ><img id="myImage" src="images/001.jpg" /></a>

JS:

$(document).ready(function() {
    var newImage = "images/002.jpg";
    $("#myImage").css("display","none");
    $("a.tnClick").click(function() {
        // imgLoad here
    });
})


If you want it to load before showing, you can trim that down a lot, like this:

$(document).ready(function() {
    var newImage = "images/002.jpg"; //Image name

    $("a.tnClick").click(function() {
      $("#myImage").hide() //Hide it
        .one('load', function() { //Set something to run when it finishes loading
          $(this).fadeIn(); //Fade it in when loaded
        })
        .attr('src', newImage) //Set the source so it begins fetching
        .each(function() {
          //Cache fix for browsers that don't trigger .load()
          if(this.complete) $(this).trigger('load');
        });
    });
});

The .one() call makes sure .load() only fires once, so no duplicate fade-ins. The .each() at the end is because some browsers don't fire the load event for images fetched from cache, this is what the polling in the example you posted is trying to do as well.


You need to be careful when using the load event for images since if the image is found in the browser's cache IE and (I am told) Chrome will not fire the event as expected.

Since I had to face this problem myself, I solved by checking the DOM attribute complete (said to be working in most major browsers): if equals to true I just unbinded the previously bound 'load' event. See example:

$("#myimage").attr("src","http://www.mysite.com/myimage.jpg").load(doSomething);

if ($("#myimage").get(0).complete) {

    // already in cache?
            $("#myimage").unbind("load");
            doSomething();


}

Hope this helps


I wanted this functionality and definitely did not want to have to load all the images when the page renders. My images are on Amazon s3 and with a big photogallery, that would be a lot of unnecessary requests. I created a quick jQuery plugin to handle it here:

$("#image-1").loadImage('/path/to/new/image.jpg',function(){  
  $(this).css({height:'120px'});//alter the css styling after the image has loaded
});

So basically, whenever a user clicks on a thumbnail that represents a set of pictures, I load the other images at that point in time. The callback allows me to change the css after the image has loaded.


Try this one?

doShow = function() {
  if ($('#img_id').attr('complete')) {
    alert('Image is loaded!');
  } else {
    window.setTimeout('doShow()', 100);
  }
};

$('#img_id').attr('src', 'image.jpg');
doShow();

Seems like the above works everywhere...

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