Herb Caudill
Herb Caudill

Reputation: 49952

Why does my spinner GIF stop while jQuery ajax call is running?

I'm just starting to wean myself from ASP.NET UpdatePanels. I'm using jQuery and jTemplates to bind the results of a web service to a grid, and everything works fine.

Here's the thing: I'm trying to show a spinner GIF while the table is being refreshed (à la UpdateProgress in ASP.NET) I've got it all working, except that the spinner is frozen. To see what's going on, I've tried moving the spinner out from the update progress div and out on the page where I can see it the whole time. It spins and spins until the refresh starts, and stays frozen until the refresh is done, and then starts spinning again. Not really what you want from a 'please wait' spinner!

This is in IE7 - haven't had a chance to test in other browsers yet. Any thoughts? Is the ajax call or the client-side databinding so resource-intensive that the browser is unable to tend to its animated GIFs?

Update

Here's the code that refreshes the grid. Not sure if this is synchronous or asynchronous.

updateConcessions = function(e) {
    $.ajax({
        type: "POST",
        url: "Concessions.aspx/GetConcessions",
        data: "{'Countries':'ga'}",
        contentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8",
        dataType: "json",
        success: function(msg) {
            applyTemplate(msg);
        },
        error: function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) {
        }
    });
}

applyTemplate = function(msg) {
    $('div#TemplateTarget').setTemplate($('div#TemplateSource').html());
    $('div#TemplateTarget').processTemplate(msg);
}

Update 2

I just checked the jQuery documentation and the $.ajax() method is asynchronous by default. Just for kicks I added this

$.ajax({
    async: true,
    ...

and it didn't make any difference.

Upvotes: 50

Views: 75325

Answers (12)

Venkat
Venkat

Reputation: 157

Browsers are single-threaded and multi-threaded.

For any browser : When you a called a function that contains a nested ajax function

java/servlet/jsp/Controller > keep Thread.sleep(5000); in servlet to understand the async in ajax when true or false.

    function ajaxFn(){
    $('#status').html('WAIT... <img id="theImg" src="page-loader.gif" alt="preload" width="30" height="30"/>');
    $('#status').css("color","red");
    $.ajax({
        url:"MyServlet",
        method: "POST",
        data: { name: $("textarea").val(),
                id : $("input[type=text]").val() },
        //async: false,
        success:function(response){
            //alert(response);  //response is "welcome to.."
            $("#status").text(response);
            $('#status').css("color","green");
        },
        complete:function(x,y){
            //alert(y)
        },
        error:function(){
            $("#status").text("?");
        }
    });
}
 

Upvotes: -1

yesnik
yesnik

Reputation: 4695

Wrapping ajax call in setTimeout function helped me to prevent freezing of gif-animation:

setTimeout(function() {
    $.get('/some_link', function (response) {
        // some actions
    });
}, 0);

Upvotes: 0

Siri How
Siri How

Reputation: 143

dennismonsewicz's answer is greate. Use spin.js and the site http://fgnass.github.com/spin.js/ shows the step which is quite easy. Under heavy process we should use CSS animations. No JS driven animations and GIFs should be used becacuse of the single thread limit otherwise the animation will freeze. CSS animations are separated from the UI thread.

Upvotes: 1

user1650613
user1650613

Reputation: 147

I know the question was regarding asynchronous ajax calls. However I wanted to add that I have found the following in my tests regarding synchronous ajax calls:

For Synchronous ajax calls. While the call is in progress (i.e. waiting for the server to respond). For the test i put a delay in the server response on the server.

Firefox 17.0.1 - animated gif continues to animate properly.

Chrome v23 - animated gif stops animation while the request is in progress.

Upvotes: 4

ruffrey
ruffrey

Reputation: 6138

The image freezes because while it is hidden the animation is disabled by IE.

To fix this, append the loading image instead of unhiding it:

function showLoader(callback){
    $('#wherever').append(
        '<img class="waiting" src="/path/to/gif.gif" />'
    );

    callback();
}

function finishForm(){
    var passed = formValidate(document.forms.clientSupportReq);

    if(passed)
    {
        $('input#subm')
            .val('Uploading...')
            .attr('disabled','disabled');
        $('input#res').hide();
    }

    return passed;
}
$(function(){
    // on submit
    $('form#formid').submit(function(){
        var l = showLoader( function(){
                         finishForm() 
                    });

        if(!l){
            $('.waiting').remove();
        }

        return l;
    });
});

Upvotes: 7

Javier Mateos
Javier Mateos

Reputation: 31

well, this is for many reasons. First at all, when the ajax call back of the server, you will sense a few miliseconds your gif frozen, but not many relevant. After you will start to process information, and depending of the objects that you manipulate and how you do it, you will have more o less time your gif frozen. This is because the thread is busy processing information. Example if you have 1000 objects and your do a order, and move information, and also you use jquery and append, insert, $.each commands, you will senses a gif frozen. Sometimes it's imposible avoid all the frozen gifs, but yu can limit the time to a few miliseconds doing this: Make a list of response ajax, and process it each 2 seconds (with this you will have the results in a alone array and you wil call it with one setInterval and you avoid the bottle neck of try process one response when the before response is still processing). if you use JQuery don't use $.each, use for. Don't use dom manipulation (append,insert,etc..), use html(). In resume do less code, refactor, and procdess all the response (if you did more of 1) like only 1. Sorry for my english.

Upvotes: 3

Matt
Matt

Reputation: 31

I had a similar problem with the browser freezing. If you are developing and testing locally, for some reason it freezes the web browser. After uploading my code to a web server it started to work. I hope this helps, because it took me hours to figure it out for myself.

Upvotes: 2

David
David

Reputation: 3227

I don't remember precisely what caused it, but we had a similar issue with IE6 in a busy box and we fixed it with this incredible hack in the Javascript:

setTimeout("document.images['BusyImage'].src=document.images['BusyImage'].src",10);

That just sets the image source to what it was before, but it is apparently enough to jostle IE out of its stupor.

edit: I think I remember what was causing this: We were loading the animation into a div with display: none. IE loads it and doesn't start the animation, because it's hidden. Unfortunately it doesn't start the animation when you set the containing block to display: block, so we used the above line of code to trick IE into reloading the image.

Upvotes: 8

Chase Seibert
Chase Seibert

Reputation: 15851

It's not the Ajax call that's freezing the browser. It's the success handler (applyTemplate). Inserting HTML into a document like that can freeze IE, depending on how much HTML there is. It's because the IE UI is single threaded; if you notice, the actual IE menus are frozen too while this is happening.

As a test, try:

applyTemplate = function(msg) {
   return;
}

Upvotes: 32

AnthonyWJones
AnthonyWJones

Reputation: 189457

Are you sure that its during the AJAX call that the GIF isn't spinning?

In your concessions.aspx place this line somewhere in the handling of GetConcessions:-

System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(5000);

I suspect that the gif spins for 5 seconds then freezes whilst IE renders and paints the result.

Upvotes: 5

Chris Pietschmann
Chris Pietschmann

Reputation: 29905

I have seen this behavior in the past when making AJAX calls. I believe this is related to the fact that browsers are only single threaded, so when the AJAX call is returned the thread is working on the call, so consequentially the animated GIF needs to stop momentarily.

Upvotes: 1

Steve g
Steve g

Reputation: 2499

Are you doing a synchronous call or asynchronous call? synchronous calls do cause the browser to seemingly lock up for the duration of the call. The other possibility is that the system is very busy doing whatever work it is doing.

Upvotes: 0

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