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pbd22
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Hi.
This is just a disaster management question. I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, all the hardware is right here. I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. Is this a risk? Thanks. |
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shimmyshack
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On Jun 22, 4:58 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi. > > This is just a disaster management question. > I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very > crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and > a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: > > http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm > > I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long > time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, > all the hardware is right here. > > I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content > could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? > I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. > > Is this a risk? > > Thanks. post a url and we can help with specific advice. You have to get the content from somewhere but using xhr is probably not the best way to scale up a site, no. Instead consider using just one large page containing many divs each named after the content you need in the "main" div, then instead of xhr with multiple http requests, you just swap the divs around. Job done, completely scaleable no matter how large the site, however it all depends what kind of site you are running - dynamic content etc.. which is why when you ask a question like this, a url is good, your site will be public one day anyway. |
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Darko
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On Jun 22, 7:06 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 22, 4:58 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > Hi. > > > This is just a disaster management question. > > I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very > > crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and > > a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: > > >http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm > > > I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long > > time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, > > all the hardware is right here. > > > I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content > > could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? > > I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. > > > Is this a risk? > > > Thanks. > > post a url and we can help with specific advice. You have to get the > content from somewhere but using xhr is probably not the best way to > scale up a site, no. Instead consider using just one large page > containing many divs each named after the content you need in the > "main" div, then instead of xhr with multiple http requests, you just > swap the divs around. Job done, completely scaleable no matter how > large the site, however it all depends what kind of site you are > running - dynamic content etc.. which is why when you ask a question > like this, a url is good, your site will be public one day anyway. Don't you think this is an inappropriate advice? Can you imagine e.g. gmail loading all data in DIV's then swapping divs around? I don't think this would be a good idea. Maybe if amount of data is really small, your advice could be acceptable, but in general, loading all contents and then displaying just those needed is very bad solution, for both the server and the client. Please correct me if I misunderstood you. To the topic author: no, xmlhttp is not so bad to use, as a matter of fact it has become quite popular, and if you're talking about loading just specific elements on the page it is the best idea. If you're loading complete pages, then stick to the traditional navigating to the page of interest. If you look around, you'll find out that almost all popular webmail applications use ajax, and if speed was an issue, they certainly wouldn't accept it. Ajax actually speeds things up, because you don't have to load the whole new page in order to display just a single new information to the user. |
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-Lost
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Darko wrote:
> On Jun 22, 7:06 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Jun 22, 4:58 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> >> >>> Hi. >>> This is just a disaster management question. >>> I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very >>> crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and >>> a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: >>> http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm >>> I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long >>> time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, >>> all the hardware is right here. >>> I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content >>> could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? >>> I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. >>> Is this a risk? >>> Thanks. >> post a url and we can help with specific advice. You have to get the >> content from somewhere but using xhr is probably not the best way to >> scale up a site, no. Instead consider using just one large page >> containing many divs each named after the content you need in the >> "main" div, then instead of xhr with multiple http requests, you just >> swap the divs around. Job done, completely scaleable no matter how >> large the site, however it all depends what kind of site you are >> running - dynamic content etc.. which is why when you ask a question >> like this, a url is good, your site will be public one day anyway. > > Don't you think this is an inappropriate advice? Can you imagine e.g. > gmail loading all data in DIV's then swapping divs around? I don't > think this would be a good idea. Maybe if amount of data is really > small, your advice could be acceptable, but in general, loading all > contents and then displaying just those needed is very bad solution, > for both the server and the client. Please correct me if I > misunderstood you. No, actually it isn't. And I am sure by shimmyshack's post history it is evident he didn't mean load 19 Megabytes worth of markup and then switch it via hidden and shown DIVs. And in fact, bytefx uses this very same method. http://www.devpro.it/bytefx/ The only problem that arises is when JavaScript is disabled, so you should also make sure each DIV has a named anchor in or near it, so links (or whatever you are clicking) can still allow you to reach that section of information. Or just provide links to the pages in question which is also acceptable, degradable JavaScript. > To the topic author: no, xmlhttp is not so bad to use, as a matter of > fact it has become quite popular, and if you're talking about loading > just specific elements on the page it is the best idea. If you're > loading complete pages, then stick to the traditional navigating to > the page of interest. If you look around, you'll find out that almost > all popular webmail applications use ajax, and if speed was an issue, > they certainly wouldn't accept it. Ajax actually speeds things up, > because you don't have to load the whole new page in order to display > just a single new information to the user. Your suggestion is just as bad, in my opinion worse. You recommend using XMLHttpRequests based on their popularity? The original poster was asking a "disaster (management) recovery" question. So recommending he use a technology simply because you think it is a popular option is not wise. Regardless of whether or not it is suitable or scalable. -- -Lost Remove the extra words to reply by e-mail. Don't e-mail me. I am kidding. No I am not. |
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shimmyshack
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On Jun 22, 7:32 pm, Darko <darko.maksimo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 22, 7:06 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 22, 4:58 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > Hi. > > > > This is just a disaster management question. > > > I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very > > > crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and > > > a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: > > > >http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm > > > > I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long > > > time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, > > > all the hardware is right here. > > > > I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content > > > could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? > > > I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. > > > > Is this a risk? > > > > Thanks. > > > post a url and we can help with specific advice. You have to get the > > content from somewhere but using xhr is probably not the best way to > > scale up a site, no. Instead consider using just one large page > > containing many divs each named after the content you need in the > > "main" div, then instead of xhr with multiple http requests, you just > > swap the divs around. Job done, completely scaleable no matter how > > large the site, however it all depends what kind of site you are > > running - dynamic content etc.. which is why when you ask a question > > like this, a url is good, your site will be public one day anyway. > > Don't you think this is an inappropriate advice? Can you imagine e.g. > gmail loading all data in DIV's then swapping divs around? I don't > think this would be a good idea. Maybe if amount of data is really > small, your advice could be acceptable, but in general, loading all > contents and then displaying just those needed is very bad solution, > for both the server and the client. Please correct me if I > misunderstood you. no not bad advice really - my caveat was that it depends on the site - the reason why ajax is such a good idea for an email site is that its entirely dynamic, however gmail and others actually "preload" a massive amount of speculative data, a huge amount of content - in case they are needed - not as divs but as json, and have them "swop" around the div with no further need for set-up and tear-down http costs. (of course divs are already in the div which means you shuold keep their number down) here are the stats for a single hit to gmail, 700KB of preloaded data, most of which is text/html text/javascript: 93,471 text/html: 534,526 image/x-icon: 1,150 flash: 7,106 ~headers: 17,274 image/png: 27,551 text/plain: 36,287 image/gif: 11,515 Even this is deceptive, the images are loaded using the same technique an image containing 20 or so "views" is loaded because it decreases the number of http requests needed for the application, a large amount of text/css is then loaded to control the position of that image, about 1KB of extra text per image, but it is still a fantsatic trade off, the technique of preloading content speculatively is just the same except that it requires js controllers, and lots of extra text/ html disguised as javascript similar to json. If a website is static, and you had say 10 pages, the cost of downloading the data would be only a few KB, you could of course download it as json strings in javascript, but all at once, speculatively, with a single call to a page. Also gmail and others are a bad example os use to support AJAX as a good method for swopping content, they have huge redundancy headroom, scalability is not a problem for them. For this guy with one single server minimising http requests is a great solution and worth a few KB, which is cacheable, unless he is running a site full of dynamic content, a caveat I gave in my last post. > > To the topic author: no, xmlhttp is not so bad to use, as a matter of > fact it has become quite popular, and if you're talking about loading > just specific elements on the page it is the best idea. If you're Popular as in fashionable, xhr is not a solution to most of the problems it is being used for. For instance where is the accessibility of xhr as it relies so much on javascript? xhr should be used only where it makes sense, and using it to deliver bits of pages, just isn't good enough, where a good old fashioned accessbile <a href="page2.htm">page 2</a> works just the same is cached, accessible, and just as fast - if you have your images,js and css sent with the correct headers. > loading complete pages, then stick to the traditional navigating to > the page of interest. If you look around, you'll find out that almost > all popular webmail applications use ajax, you will also find that turning javascript off, these applications degrade gracefully - a fact most people that use ajax to create their websites ignore. These applications tend to use ajax because it makes sense in their environment, gmail, youtube and other highly changeable content sites must use xhr but facebook with less changeable content doesnt rely on ajax, amazon, ebay, bebo, even flickr make comparitively small use of ajax. >and if speed was an issue, > they certainly wouldn't accept it. It's not speed, its the concurrent http requests that make it a scalability nightmare, unless it is absolutely needed, as opposed to loading <html><head> <script>var objPreloadedContent = { "pages": [ { "div_heading": "contact", "div_title": "Contact Us", "div_content": "<p>Please use this form to contact us...", "div_footer": "Please feel free to contact use in any way you wish" }, { "div_heading": "sales", "div_title": "Sales Department", "div_content": "<p>Here is a list of our sales team...", "div_footer": "We are happy to sell sell sell.." } ] } </script></head><body>... within the homepage, and swopping is you can >Ajax actually speeds things up, > because you don't have to load the whole new page in order to display > just a single new information to the user. but using ajax in this "single piece" mode means you do have to request the data piecewise, so you get latency, header overhead, http costs, server cpu costs. AJAX is in general a waste of resources, unless you have a clear need that cannot be met by using a more conventional approach. |
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pbd22
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On Jun 22, 2:01 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 22, 7:32 pm, Darko <darko.maksimo...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 22, 7:06 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Jun 22, 4:58 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > Hi. > > > > > This is just a disaster management question. > > > > I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very > > > > crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and > > > > a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: > > > > >http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm > > > > > I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long > > > > time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, > > > > all the hardware is right here. > > > > > I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content > > > > could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? > > > > I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. > > > > > Is this a risk? > > > > > Thanks. > > > > post a url and we can help with specific advice. You have to get the > > > content from somewhere but using xhr is probably not the best way to > > > scale up a site, no. Instead consider using just one large page > > > containing many divs each named after the content you need in the > > > "main" div, then instead of xhr with multiple http requests, you just > > > swap the divs around. Job done, completely scaleable no matter how > > > large the site, however it all depends what kind of site you are > > > running - dynamic content etc.. which is why when you ask a question > > > like this, a url is good, your site will be public one day anyway. > > > Don't you think this is an inappropriate advice? Can you imagine e.g. > > gmail loading all data in DIV's then swapping divs around? I don't > > think this would be a good idea. Maybe if amount of data is really > > small, your advice could be acceptable, but in general, loading all > > contents and then displaying just those needed is very bad solution, > > for both the server and the client. Please correct me if I > > misunderstood you. > > no not bad advice really - my caveat was that it depends on the site - > the reason why ajax is such a good idea for an email site is that its > entirely dynamic, however gmail and others actually "preload" a > massive amount of speculative data, a huge amount of content - in case > they are needed - not as divs but as json, and have them "swop" > around the div with no further need for set-up and tear-down http > costs. (of course divs are already in the div which means you shuold > keep their number down) > here are the stats for a single hit to gmail, 700KB of preloaded data, > most of which is text/html > text/javascript: 93,471 > text/html: 534,526 > image/x-icon: 1,150 > flash: 7,106 > ~headers: 17,274 > image/png: 27,551 > text/plain: 36,287 > image/gif: 11,515 > Even this is deceptive, the images are loaded using the same technique > an image containing 20 or so "views" is loaded because it decreases > the number of http requests needed for the application, a large amount > of text/css is then loaded to control the position of that image, > about 1KB of extra text per image, but it is still a fantsatic trade > off, the technique of preloading content speculatively is just the > same except that it requires js controllers, and lots of extra text/ > html disguised as javascript similar to json. > > If a website is static, and you had say 10 pages, the cost of > downloading the data would be only a few KB, you could of course > download it as json strings in javascript, but all at once, > speculatively, with a single call to a page. Also gmail and others are > a bad example os use to support AJAX as a good method for swopping > content, they have huge redundancy headroom, scalability is not a > problem for them. For this guy with one single server minimising http > requests is a great solution and worth a few KB, which is cacheable, > unless he is running a site full of dynamic content, a caveat I gave > in my last post. > > > > > To the topic author: no, xmlhttp is not so bad to use, as a matter of > > fact it has become quite popular, and if you're talking about loading > > just specific elements on the page it is the best idea. If you're > > Popular as in fashionable, xhr is not a solution to most of the > problems it is being used for. For instance where is the accessibility > of xhr as it relies so much on javascript? xhr should be used only > where it makes sense, and using it to deliver bits of pages, just > isn't good enough, where a good old fashioned accessbile <a > href="page2.htm">page 2</a> works just the same is cached, accessible, > and just as fast - if you have your images,js and css sent with the > correct headers. > > > loading complete pages, then stick to the traditional navigating to > > the page of interest. If you look around, you'll find out that almost > > all popular webmail applications use ajax, > > you will also find that turning javascript off, these applications > degrade gracefully - a fact most people that use ajax to create their > websites ignore. These applications tend to use ajax because it makes > sense in their environment, gmail, youtube and other highly changeable > content sites must use xhr but facebook with less changeable content > doesnt rely on ajax, amazon, ebay, bebo, even flickr make > comparitively small use of ajax. > > >and if speed was an issue, > > they certainly wouldn't accept it. > > It's not speed, its the concurrent http requests that make it a > scalability nightmare, unless it is absolutely needed, as opposed to > loading > <html><head> > <script>var objPreloadedContent = > { > "pages": > [ > { > "div_heading": "contact", > "div_title": "Contact Us", > "div_content": "<p>Please use this form to contact us...", > "div_footer": "Please feel free to contact use in any way you > wish" > }, > { > "div_heading": "sales", > "div_title": "Sales Department", > "div_content": "<p>Here is a list of our sales team...", > "div_footer": "We are happy to sell sell sell.." > } > ] > > } > > </script></head><body>... > within the homepage, and swopping is you can > > >Ajax actually speeds things up, > > because you don't have to load the whole new page in order to display > > just a single new information to the user. > > but using ajax in this "single piece" mode means you do have to > request the data piecewise, so you get latency, header overhead, http > costs, server cpu costs. > AJAX is in general a waste of resources, unless you have a clear need > that cannot be met by using a more conventional approach. ShimmyShack - Thanks. I think I am going to go with multiple DIVs and manipulation of display:none. One question along those lines, though. This will mean that the page will have a massive amount of HTML with tons (I mean tons) of hidden <TR> elements. Is there any harm here? Thanks again. |
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shimmyshack
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On Jun 23, 6:25 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 22, 2:01 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 22, 7:32 pm, Darko <darko.maksimo...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Jun 22, 7:06 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 22, 4:58 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > Hi. > > > > > > This is just a disaster management question. > > > > > I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very > > > > > crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and > > > > > a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: > > > > > >http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm > > > > > > I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long > > > > > time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, > > > > > all the hardware is right here. > > > > > > I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content > > > > > could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? > > > > > I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. > > > > > > Is this a risk? > > > > > > Thanks. > > > > > post a url and we can help with specific advice. You have to get the > > > > content from somewhere but using xhr is probably not the best way to > > > > scale up a site, no. Instead consider using just one large page > > > > containing many divs each named after the content you need in the > > > > "main" div, then instead of xhr with multiple http requests, you just > > > > swap the divs around. Job done, completely scaleable no matter how > > > > large the site, however it all depends what kind of site you are > > > > running - dynamic content etc.. which is why when you ask a question > > > > like this, a url is good, your site will be public one day anyway. > > > > Don't you think this is an inappropriate advice? Can you imagine e.g. > > > gmail loading all data in DIV's then swapping divs around? I don't > > > think this would be a good idea. Maybe if amount of data is really > > > small, your advice could be acceptable, but in general, loading all > > > contents and then displaying just those needed is very bad solution, > > > for both the server and the client. Please correct me if I > > > misunderstood you. > > > no not bad advice really - my caveat was that it depends on the site - > > the reason why ajax is such a good idea for an email site is that its > > entirely dynamic, however gmail and others actually "preload" a > > massive amount of speculative data, a huge amount of content - in case > > they are needed - not as divs but as json, and have them "swop" > > around the div with no further need for set-up and tear-down http > > costs. (of course divs are already in the div which means you shuold > > keep their number down) > > here are the stats for a single hit to gmail, 700KB of preloaded data, > > most of which is text/html > > text/javascript: 93,471 > > text/html: 534,526 > > image/x-icon: 1,150 > > flash: 7,106 > > ~headers: 17,274 > > image/png: 27,551 > > text/plain: 36,287 > > image/gif: 11,515 > > Even this is deceptive, the images are loaded using the same technique > > an image containing 20 or so "views" is loaded because it decreases > > the number of http requests needed for the application, a large amount > > of text/css is then loaded to control the position of that image, > > about 1KB of extra text per image, but it is still a fantsatic trade > > off, the technique of preloading content speculatively is just the > > same except that it requires js controllers, and lots of extra text/ > > html disguised as javascript similar to json. > > > If a website is static, and you had say 10 pages, the cost of > > downloading the data would be only a few KB, you could of course > > download it as json strings in javascript, but all at once, > > speculatively, with a single call to a page. Also gmail and others are > > a bad example os use to support AJAX as a good method for swopping > > content, they have huge redundancy headroom, scalability is not a > > problem for them. For this guy with one single server minimising http > > requests is a great solution and worth a few KB, which is cacheable, > > unless he is running a site full of dynamic content, a caveat I gave > > in my last post. > > > > To the topic author: no, xmlhttp is not so bad to use, as a matter of > > > fact it has become quite popular, and if you're talking about loading > > > just specific elements on the page it is the best idea. If you're > > > Popular as in fashionable, xhr is not a solution to most of the > > problems it is being used for. For instance where is the accessibility > > of xhr as it relies so much on javascript? xhr should be used only > > where it makes sense, and using it to deliver bits of pages, just > > isn't good enough, where a good old fashioned accessbile <a > > href="page2.htm">page 2</a> works just the same is cached, accessible, > > and just as fast - if you have your images,js and css sent with the > > correct headers. > > > > loading complete pages, then stick to the traditional navigating to > > > the page of interest. If you look around, you'll find out that almost > > > all popular webmail applications use ajax, > > > you will also find that turning javascript off, these applications > > degrade gracefully - a fact most people that use ajax to create their > > websites ignore. These applications tend to use ajax because it makes > > sense in their environment, gmail, youtube and other highly changeable > > content sites must use xhr but facebook with less changeable content > > doesnt rely on ajax, amazon, ebay, bebo, even flickr make > > comparitively small use of ajax. > > > >and if speed was an issue, > > > they certainly wouldn't accept it. > > > It's not speed, its the concurrent http requests that make it a > > scalability nightmare, unless it is absolutely needed, as opposed to > > loading > > <html><head> > > <script>var objPreloadedContent = > > { > > "pages": > > [ > > { > > "div_heading": "contact", > > "div_title": "Contact Us", > > "div_content": "<p>Please use this form to contact us...", > > "div_footer": "Please feel free to contact use in any way you > > wish" > > }, > > { > > "div_heading": "sales", > > "div_title": "Sales Department", > > "div_content": "<p>Here is a list of our sales team...", > > "div_footer": "We are happy to sell sell sell.." > > } > > ] > > > } > > > </script></head><body>... > > within the homepage, and swopping is you can > > > >Ajax actually speeds things up, > > > because you don't have to load the whole new page in order to display > > > just a single new information to the user. > > > but using ajax in this "single piece" mode means you do have to > > request the data piecewise, so you get latency, header overhead, http > > costs, server cpu costs. > > AJAX is in general a waste of resources, unless you have a clear need > > that cannot be met by using a more conventional approach. > > ShimmyShack - > > Thanks. I think I am going to go with multiple DIVs and manipulation > of display:none. One question along those lines, > though. This will mean that the page will have a massive amount > of HTML with tons (I mean tons) of hidden <TR> elements. Is > there any harm here? > > Thanks again. well I was assuming your code would be a few pages of content (one piece of content per div) but rembember any content which you are storing in divs, will be in the DOM unless they are hard coded in the markup to have display:none - setting this in the CSS after page load wouldnt be good because the whole page would have to render before hiding some divs, and so yes, storing a lot of hidden tables is not good, a "ton" of TRs just shouldnt exsit any more, it has been years since css replaced the need for tables!! I was assuming your code was modern sematic markup with css for the display/look&feel. If you are using tables then you could consider storing your contents as javascript strings of pure text, and creating the table dynamically, however in the end, the best bet might well be to simply use good old fashioned links until you markup is modern, and then apply the modern techniques to it, ending up with a very clean easy to update site. |
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pbd22
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On Jun 24, 4:21 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 23, 6:25 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 22, 2:01 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Jun 22, 7:32 pm, Darko <darko.maksimo...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 22, 7:06 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > On Jun 22, 4:58 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > Hi. > > > > > > > This is just a disaster management question. > > > > > > I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very > > > > > > crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and > > > > > > a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: > > > > > > >http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm > > > > > > > I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long > > > > > > time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, > > > > > > all the hardware is right here. > > > > > > > I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content > > > > > > could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? > > > > > > I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. > > > > > > > Is this a risk? > > > > > > > Thanks. > > > > > > post a url and we can help with specific advice. You have to get the > > > > > content from somewhere but using xhr is probably not the best way to > > > > > scale up a site, no. Instead consider using just one large page > > > > > containing many divs each named after the content you need in the > > > > > "main" div, then instead of xhr with multiple http requests, you just > > > > > swap the divs around. Job done, completely scaleable no matter how > > > > > large the site, however it all depends what kind of site you are > > > > > running - dynamic content etc.. which is why when you ask a question > > > > > like this, a url is good, your site will be public one day anyway. > > > > > Don't you think this is an inappropriate advice? Can you imagine e.g. > > > > gmail loading all data in DIV's then swapping divs around? I don't > > > > think this would be a good idea. Maybe if amount of data is really > > > > small, your advice could be acceptable, but in general, loading all > > > > contents and then displaying just those needed is very bad solution, > > > > for both the server and the client. Please correct me if I > > > > misunderstood you. > > > > no not bad advice really - my caveat was that it depends on the site - > > > the reason why ajax is such a good idea for an email site is that its > > > entirely dynamic, however gmail and others actually "preload" a > > > massive amount of speculative data, a huge amount of content - in case > > > they are needed - not as divs but as json, and have them "swop" > > > around the div with no further need for set-up and tear-down http > > > costs. (of course divs are already in the div which means you shuold > > > keep their number down) > > > here are the stats for a single hit to gmail, 700KB of preloaded data, > > > most of which is text/html > > > text/javascript: 93,471 > > > text/html: 534,526 > > > image/x-icon: 1,150 > > > flash: 7,106 > > > ~headers: 17,274 > > > image/png: 27,551 > > > text/plain: 36,287 > > > image/gif: 11,515 > > > Even this is deceptive, the images are loaded using the same technique > > > an image containing 20 or so "views" is loaded because it decreases > > > the number of http requests needed for the application, a large amount > > > of text/css is then loaded to control the position of that image, > > > about 1KB of extra text per image, but it is still a fantsatic trade > > > off, the technique of preloading content speculatively is just the > > > same except that it requires js controllers, and lots of extra text/ > > > html disguised as javascript similar to json. > > > > If a website is static, and you had say 10 pages, the cost of > > > downloading the data would be only a few KB, you could of course > > > download it as json strings in javascript, but all at once, > > > speculatively, with a single call to a page. Also gmail and others are > > > a bad example os use to support AJAX as a good method for swopping > > > content, they have huge redundancy headroom, scalability is not a > > > problem for them. For this guy with one single server minimising http > > > requests is a great solution and worth a few KB, which is cacheable, > > > unless he is running a site full of dynamic content, a caveat I gave > > > in my last post. > > > > > To the topic author: no, xmlhttp is not so bad to use, as a matter of > > > > fact it has become quite popular, and if you're talking about loading > > > > just specific elements on the page it is the best idea. If you're > > > > Popular as in fashionable, xhr is not a solution to most of the > > > problems it is being used for. For instance where is the accessibility > > > of xhr as it relies so much on javascript? xhr should be used only > > > where it makes sense, and using it to deliver bits of pages, just > > > isn't good enough, where a good old fashioned accessbile <a > > > href="page2.htm">page 2</a> works just the same is cached, accessible, > > > and just as fast - if you have your images,js and css sent with the > > > correct headers. > > > > > loading complete pages, then stick to the traditional navigating to > > > > the page of interest. If you look around, you'll find out that almost > > > > all popular webmail applications use ajax, > > > > you will also find that turning javascript off, these applications > > > degrade gracefully - a fact most people that use ajax to create their > > > websites ignore. These applications tend to use ajax because it makes > > > sense in their environment, gmail, youtube and other highly changeable > > > content sites must use xhr but facebook with less changeable content > > > doesnt rely on ajax, amazon, ebay, bebo, even flickr make > > > comparitively small use of ajax. > > > > >and if speed was an issue, > > > > they certainly wouldn't accept it. > > > > It's not speed, its the concurrent http requests that make it a > > > scalability nightmare, unless it is absolutely needed, as opposed to > > > loading > > > <html><head> > > > <script>var objPreloadedContent = > > > { > > > "pages": > > > [ > > > { > > > "div_heading": "contact", > > > "div_title": "Contact Us", > > > "div_content": "<p>Please use this form to contact us...", > > > "div_footer": "Please feel free to contact use in any way you > > > wish" > > > }, > > > { > > > "div_heading": "sales", > > > "div_title": "Sales Department", > > > "div_content": "<p>Here is a list of our sales team...", > > > "div_footer": "We are happy to sell sell sell.." > > > } > > > ] > > > > } > > > > </script></head><body>... > > > within the homepage, and swopping is you can > > > > >Ajax actually speeds things up, > > > > because you don't have to load the whole new page in order to display > > > > just a single new information to the user. > > > > but using ajax in this "single piece" mode means you do have to > > > request the data piecewise, so you get latency, header overhead, http > > > costs, server cpu costs. > > > AJAX is in general a waste of resources, unless you have a clear need > > > that cannot be met by using a more conventional approach. > > > ShimmyShack - > > > Thanks. I think I am going to go with multiple DIVs and manipulation > > of display:none. One question along those lines, > > though. This will mean that the page will have a massive amount > > of HTML with tons (I mean tons) of hidden <TR> elements. Is > > there any harm here? > > > Thanks again. > > well I was assuming your code would be a few pages of content (one > piece of content per div) but rembember any content which you are > storing in divs, will be in the DOM unless they are hard coded in the > markup to have display:none - setting this in the CSS after page load > wouldnt be good because the whole page would have to render before > hiding some divs, and so yes, storing a lot of hidden tables is not > good, a "ton" of TRs just shouldnt exsit any more, it has been years > since css replaced the need for tables!! > I was assuming your code was modern sematic markup with css for the > display/look&feel. If you are using tables then you could consider > storing your contents as javascript strings of pure text, and creating > the table dynamically, however in the end, the best bet might well be > to simply use good old fashioned links until you markup is modern, and > then apply the modern techniques to it, ending up with a very clean > easy to update site. Hi, thanks. I have no problem trying to learn "the right way" to do things once I know what those things are. By "modern techniques" do you mean a page with only DIV tags and CSS - no tables at all? I am assuming this is the way to go? Thanks again. |
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shimmyshack
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On Jun 25, 12:42 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Jun 24, 4:21 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 23, 6:25 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Jun 22, 2:01 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 22, 7:32 pm, Darko <darko.maksimo...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > On Jun 22, 7:06 pm, shimmyshack <matt.fa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > On Jun 22, 4:58 pm, pbd22 <dush...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > > Hi. > > > > > > > > This is just a disaster management question. > > > > > > > I am using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content in a very > > > > > > > crucial area of my web site. Same as an IFrame, but using XMLHTTP and > > > > > > > a DIV. I got the core of the javascript from here: > > > > > > > >http://www.dynamicdrive.com/dynamici...jaxcontent.htm > > > > > > > > I noticed in the demo that sometimes the content takes a long > > > > > > > time to load. That is not the case with my Dev Box, but, then again, > > > > > > > all the hardware is right here. > > > > > > > > I am wondering if using XMLHTTP for the dynamic loading of content > > > > > > > could lose on performance as the site starts to gain in popularity? > > > > > > > I don't to lose customers because of content wait-time. > > > > > > > > Is this a risk? > > > > > > > > Thanks. > > > > > > > post a url and we can help with specific advice. You have to get the > > > > > > content from somewhere but using xhr is probably not the best way to > > > > > > scale up a site, no. Instead consider using just one large page > > > > > > containing many divs each named after the content you need in the > > > > > > "main" div, then instead of xhr with multiple http requests, you just > > > > > > swap the divs around. Job done, completely scaleable no matter how > > > > > > large the site, however it all depends what kind of site you are > > > > > > running - dynamic content etc.. which is why when you ask a question > > > > > > like this, a url is good, your site will be public one day anyway. > > > > > > Don't you think this is an inappropriate advice? Can you imagine e.g. > > > > > gmail loading all data in DIV's then swapping divs around? I don't > > > > > think this would be a good idea. Maybe if amount of data is really > > > > > small, your advice could be acceptable, but in general, loading all > > > > > contents and then displaying just those needed is very bad solution, > > > > > for both the server and the client. Please correct me if I > > > > > misunderstood you. > > > > > no not bad advice really - my caveat was that it depends on the site - > > > > the reason why ajax is such a good idea for an email site is that its > > > > entirely dynamic, however gmail and others actually "preload" a > > > > massive amount of speculative data, a huge amount of content - in case > > > > they are needed - not as divs but as json, and have them "swop" > > > > around the div with no further need for set-up and tear-down http > > > > costs. (of course divs are already in the div which means you shuold > > > > keep their number down) > > > > here are the stats for a single hit to gmail, 700KB of preloaded data, > > > > most of which is text/html > > > > text/javascript: 93,471 > > > > text/html: 534,526 > > > > image/x-icon: 1,150 > > > > flash: 7,106 > > > > ~headers: 17,274 > > > > image/png: 27,551 > > > > text/plain: 36,287 > > > > image/gif: 11,515 > > > > Even this is deceptive, the images are loaded using the same technique > > > > an image containing 20 or so "views" is loaded because it decreases > > > > the number of http requests needed for the application, a large amount > > > > of text/css is then loaded to control the position of that image, > > > > about 1KB of extra text per image, but it is still a fantsatic trade > > > > off, the technique of preloading content speculatively is just the > > > > same except that it requires js controllers, and lots of extra text/ > > > > html disguised as javascript similar to json. > > > > > If a website is static, and you had say 10 pages, the cost of > > > > downloading the data would be only a few KB, you could of course > > > > download it as json strings in javascript, but all at once, > > > > speculatively, with a single call to a page. Also gmail and others are > > > > a bad example os use to support AJAX as a good method for swopping > > > > content, they have huge redundancy headroom, scalability is not a > > > > problem for them. For this guy with one single server minimising http > > > > requests is a great solution and worth a few KB, which is cacheable, > > > > unless he is running a site full of dynamic content, a caveat I gave > > > > in my last post. > > > > > > To the topic author: no, xmlhttp is not so bad to use, as a matter of > > > > > fact it has become quite popular, and if you're talking about loading > > > > > just specific elements on the page it is the best idea. If you're > > > > > Popular as in fashionable, xhr is not a solution to most of the > > > > problems it is being used for. For instance where is the accessibility > > > > of xhr as it relies so much on javascript? xhr should be used only > > > > where it makes sense, and using it to deliver bits of pages, just > > > > isn't good enough, where a good old fashioned accessbile <a > > > > href="page2.htm">page 2</a> works just the same is cached, accessible, > > > > and just as fast - if you have your images,js and css sent with the > > > > correct headers. > > > > > > loading complete pages, then stick to the traditional navigating to > > > > > the page of interest. If you look around, you'll find out that almost > > > > > all popular webmail applications use ajax, > > > > > you will also find that turning javascript off, these applications > > > > degrade gracefully - a fact most people that use ajax to create their > > > > websites ignore. These applications tend to use ajax because it makes > > > > sense in their environment, gmail, youtube and other highly changeable > > > > content sites must use xhr but facebook with less changeable content > > > > doesnt rely on ajax, amazon, ebay, bebo, even flickr make > > > > comparitively small use of ajax. > > > > > >and if speed was an issue, > > > > > they certainly wouldn't accept it. > > > > > It's not speed, its the concurrent http requests that make it a > > > > scalability nightmare, unless it is absolutely needed, as opposed to > > > > loading > > > > <html><head> > > > > <script>var objPreloadedContent = > > > > { > > > > "pages": > > > > [ > > > > { > > > > "div_heading": "contact", > > > > "div_title": "Contact Us", > > > > "div_content": "<p>Please use this form to contact us...", > > > > "div_footer": "Please feel free to contact use in any way you > > > > wish" > > > > }, > > > > { > > > > "div_heading": "sales", > > > > "div_title": "Sales Department", > > > > "div_content": "<p>Here is a list of our sales team...", > > > > "div_footer": "We are happy to sell sell sell.." > > > > } > > > > ] > > > > > } > > > > > </script></head><body>... > > > > within the homepage, and swopping is you can > > > > > >Ajax actually speeds things up, > > > > > because you don't have to load the whole new page in order to display > > > > > just a single new information to the user. > > > > > but using ajax in this "single piece" mode means you do have to > > > > request the data piecewise, so you get latency, header overhead, http > > > > costs, server cpu costs. > > > > AJAX is in general a waste of resources, unless you have a clear need > > > > that cannot be met by using a more conventional approach. > > > > ShimmyShack - > > > > Thanks. I think I am going to go with multiple DIVs and manipulation > > > of display:none. One question along those lines, > > > though. This will mean that the page will have a massive amount > > > of HTML with tons (I mean tons) of hidden <TR> elements. Is > > > there any harm here? > > > > Thanks again. > > > well I was assuming your code would be a few pages of content (one > > piece of content per div) but rembember any content which you are > > storing in divs, will be in the DOM unless they are hard coded in the > > markup to have display:none - setting this in the CSS after page load > > wouldnt be good because the whole page would have to render before > > hiding some divs, and so yes, storing a lot of hidden tables is not > > good, a "ton" of TRs just shouldnt exsit any more, it has been years > > since css replaced the need for tables!! > > I was assuming your code was modern sematic markup with css for the > > display/look&feel. If you are using tables then you could consider > > storing your contents as javascript strings of pure text, and creating > > the table dynamically, however in the end, the best bet might well be > > to simply use good old fashioned links until you markup is modern, and > > then apply the modern techniques to it, ending up with a very clean > > easy to update site. > > Hi, thanks. I have no problem trying to learn "the right way" to do > things once I know what those things are. By "modern techniques" do > you mean a page with only DIV tags and CSS - no tables at all? I am > assuming this is the way to go? Thanks again. yeah, just the type of html/xhtml that you choose to use. Bear in mind that it takes a bit of thinking to change, but that the learning curse is WELL worth it. Back in 2004 there was this huge table driven site, each page's source code printed to 7 A4 pages of closely packed text, with css, it went down to 2 nicely formatted pages. It's better for you, for those who use assistive devices, for your search engine rating, and for you clients as the rendering time is slashed. I recommend checking out sites like http://alistapart.com/ Check out the source code to alistapart and see no tables! The front page looks as if it could use tables, but download firefox and use "view->page style->none" to see that it is just css styling that produces the sites look and feel. Which means that there are just a couple of separate documents included in the head section of each html page that dictates the entire look and feel of the website, if you feel like a change just change the css document, and your whole site completely changes in an instant, or offer multiple look&feels for those who require high visibility, allow your site to zoom in, etc... all with no changes to any of the new style html you are going to write. Tools you can use include the web developer extension for firefox - to highlight all the elements, <p> <h1> <h2>... <ul> that you will start using more often now to see what the bounding box for these elements looks like and how to shimmy them around in the page using css. You can use firebug to edit the css live, or other extensions like that, and you're on your way. Consider that when you use javascript for functionality in your pages, it should not be "core" to the website, it should add to an already working website, so code your website to work in the old fashioned way and add a layer over the top, of unobtrusive javascript that hijacks the links and does the fancy stuff. Once you start using css+(x)html you wont be worrying about maintainability, you wont mind having 20 pages of markup per site, you will find it easier to code a website, hijacking it afterwards, and your work is done; the old tablebased sites are so hard to maintain once a change is needed that the work involved means you reach around for shortcuts, and draggin in content from iframes and so on and on... |
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