I have a page that loads a lot of fairly large i开发者_C百科mages (about 200 of 100Kb images [about 600 x 400 px]).
What I'm trying to do is manipulate the photo if it's in portrait, as opposed to landscape.
The problem I'm experiencing is that when i use javascript to grab a portrait photo's properties when it's loading, the height is significantly lower than what it should be, and the width is bigger than it should be. Specifically, a 75 x 100 image was considered as a 100 x 16. So when the function runs through this image, the image is considered landscape, not portrait, and skips over.
I had hard time identifying the problem, because the property shows it as a 75 x 100px image after it's done loading.
Is there a way to get around this problem? or run the function after all the images have loaded?
Run the function after it has loaded, You'd do it like this:
Using the DOM exclusively
var newImg = document.createElement('img');
newImg.src = "theImage.png";
newImg.alt = "Always specify an alternate text for accessibility, even if left blank";
newImg.onload = function () {
//Image manipulation
};
galleryNode.appendChild(newImg); //Replace galleryNode with the parent element of your image.
Using innerHTML
galleryNode.innerHTML += "<img src='theImage.png' alt='' id='newImage1'/>";
var newImg = document.getElementById('newImage1');
newImg.onload = function () {
//Image manipulation
};
Using jQuery
$('.gallery img').live('load',function () {
//Image manipulation
});
Its always a good idea to run javascript after the page elements have finished loading. I usually do this in jQuery, like this:
$(function(){
//code to run after load goes here
});
Otherwise, you can try modifying the body tag and giving it an onload attribute, like:
<body onload="myFunction();" >
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