Counter Help ... Out Of Memory

Jan 27, 2007

I need help with this code. its a counter.

var count= 0
function onm() {
atextbox.value=ffee
count++
setTimeout(onm(),100)
}

And in the body:

<body onload="onm()">
<input type="text" value="0" name="atextbox">
</body>

I get always an error: Out of memory

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Counter Clock - Counter That Starts At 0 On January 1st And Ends At 10,900,000 On December 31st

Jan 13, 2010

I am building a website and the client wants a counter that starts at 0 on January 1st and ends at 10,900,000 on December 31st. I have basically no experience with writing javascript, only plugging in tutorials I find online

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Memory Leak - When Use Mouse Wheel In Firefox To Scroll Contents Of The DIV - Memory Usage In Firefox Goes Through The Roof

Mar 26, 2009

First the code:

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/>
<title></title>
<script type="text/javascript">
function TextScroll(scrollname, div_name, up_name, down_name, top_name){
[Code]...

When I use mouse wheel in Firefox to scroll contents of the DIV, memory usage in Firefox goes through the roof. Code above is a fully working page, if anyone would like to see what's up, just load it up, and start moving your mouse wheel in the area with text. You don't actually have to scroll the text, just moving the wheel back and forth in that DIV will do. Memory usage will start going up quite fast, and after you stop moving the wheel, it will finally come down a bit after a short while. I've highlighted in red the line where mousewheel event is registered for Firefox. I'm not sure if it's really a problem, but since Opera and IE don't have any strange memory usage, and Firefox does, maybe I did something wrong. In everyday use it shouldn't matter [don't expect to have kilometers of content to scroll], but anyway, it is a bit unsettling.

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Feb 23, 2007

I have a certain file in my webpage that my readers can download
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Googling for Download counters did not help
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May 2, 2006

I've been putting together a small pet project. Once it was finished i realised it had a gigantic memory leak inside of it. I tried to read up on the subject, but couldn't find the source of the problem via the articals.

This site is very simple, so I'd think idenifying (and hopefully fixing) the problem would be easy. Here is the relavent portions of JS (followed by links to the full page incase you need to see that): Code:

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Mar 26, 2006

I was wondering how good is JavaScript with memory management. I have
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Nov 20, 2006

Internet Explorer leaks memory when I update a div container using
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give it.

I know that the innerHTML is the problem as I have successfully
narrowed down the leak to that line. It only leaks memory when I assign
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for example, with the exact same information to the same div does not
leak. Note I have also tried using such existing AJAX packages like
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I need to do it this way as my XML documents are styled using an XSL
stylesheet and then transformed using transformNode [I will omit
details regarding firefox as there is no problem there]. I have looked
into transformNodeToObject as a way to get a dom object that I
originally assumed could be appended [as a child] to my containing
element. This did not work and gave me compatibility errors.

I suppose I am either looking for someone who has solved this problem,
or who has an acceptable work around. Or someone to say that it cannot
be solved.

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Mar 16, 2009

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May 22, 2010

I'm trying to make a calculator in HTML/Javascript but I'm having trouble with the memory buttons. Here is the code:

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<head>
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[code]....

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Jul 4, 2009

I'm writing a very complex javascript application and I'd like memory usage to be as low as possible, so I've got a question about objects.

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I haven't written anything in javascript as complex as I'm about to write, so I never worked with objects. As far as I understand, $.fn.whatever will add function to prototype, while $.whatever will add function only to one entry of jQuery object.

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Oct 5, 2011

take a look at the below code. The below code is small representation of a bigger system.

HTML Code:
<html>
<head>
<style type="text/css">
</style>

[Code]...

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Jan 19, 2010

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Apr 26, 2011

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Jul 23, 2005

I am a little confused how the memory for objects is allocated in
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Fading Images In And Out With A Loop - Out Of Memory

Mar 8, 2010

I'm designing a page to fade multiple images (three) in and out over a set period of time (one minute, say). The code I have works as follows:

I define an array and fill it with the div objects I want to fade in and out. I have some simple tags (2 for opaque, 1 for fading in, -1 for fading out, etc.) that I set to show the state of the object.

First I check if the object is opaque, and if so set it to fade along with a time;

Or if it's transparent I give it a 1 in 10 chance of fading in during this iteration. If it's currently fading in or out I check to make sure it's on track and change the opacity of the div accordingly.

Originally, I had the function call back to itself using setTimeout after the loop had gone through all the divs and changed their opacities appropriately. This caused an out of memory error (though, strangely, if I had any alerts in the function it didn't give me the error).

So the version below has the code in a while loop to let it run for 20 seconds - this gives me the "a script...run slowly, do you want to continue the script?" message.

So I have several questions:

1) First and foremost, why is my function causing out of memory/run slowly errors and what is the best way to fix that?

2) Is there a better way to code this effect (final result will be six lights fading in and out for a minute or so).

3)I'm not an experienced programmer, so any bad practices, ways to streamline, no no's, etc. that you see, please point out.

I've only posted the script here - the page simple consists of three divs (id's grad0, grad1, grad2) and a call to the function copied here.

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Do (and If Not Should) Browsers Let A Script Know How Much Memory They Are Consuming?

Nov 12, 2010

I was thinking about doing a dynamic scrolling table. As the user scrolls down ajax loads in more rows to show. With the table I'm working on having the client load the whole thing would result in a page well north of 2 GB, so it isn't feasable.I will probably end up putting some logical limits - hold say 100 rows total with 20 or so visible.

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Minimiza Cpu/memory Usage,with Each Function?

Aug 23, 2011

I have a really long application so i'm trying to minimiza cpu/memory usage,with each function, therefore I have a few simple questions.

1. on elements added after the page has been loaded,is there a difference between putting "onclick" inside the element tag or using jquery's delegate like the following example?

$("#mainchatwindow").delegate('img[func="gift"]','click' function....

2. does it make a big difference selecting an element with a full path like (#body #contentdiv #userstbl td.example)or just typing (.example) ?

3. I have 2 arrays of objects, both objects has an id attribute, one of then objects are the images on the page, the second one is an ajax result with updated images.will it be better to first loop threw both objects just to create new arrays with just the id's instead of looping the threw those big objects? like this:

Code:
if (data.online)
var online_length = data.online.length;
else[code]..........

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Dec 14, 2005

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is there any way of telling:
Date
Time
Browser
OS
Resolution
Country
Host Name/Web Page/Referring Link

I was checking "shortstat" - but thats for people running a server, right?

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Mar 1, 2006

I have the AJAX-script. It eats memory about 4Kb per one callback.
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Event Handling, DOM, Closures And Memory Leaks

Oct 18, 2006

I have a question regarding how to prevent memory leaks in Internet
Explorer when using closures. I already knew about the circular
reference problem, and until now was able to prevent memory leak
problems. But I needed to store DOM elements and can't solve it
anymore. So I search the group archive to see if I missed any
valuable information. I found some interesting articles, but somehow
could not apply it to my problem or I did not understand it fully.
In particular the articles that talked about setting variables to
NULL seemed as an easy solution, but I think I didn't understand it,
because it didn't seem to work.

So, let me explain my problem in more detail. I am working on some
very dynamic and complex page. It uses AJAX (XMLHttpRequest) to alter
different parts of the page. This already disqualifies the finalize
method solution to cleanup memory leak problems. I use several
"component classes" to do the work of creating DOM elements in some
container element and provide an easy to use interface for
manipulation the content. For example I can call
component.setBackgroundColor("red")
and the component takes care of changing the style on the correct
DOM element that is encapsulated in the component. In reality the
component uses more complex interface method, but I hope you
get the picture of why I do this.

Let me show you some example code:

function MyComponent()
{
var div;
var handler = null;

this.generate = function generate()
{
div = document.createElement("div");
div.onclick = MyComponent.createClickHandler(this);
// normally more elements are created here
return div;
}

this.setBackgroundColor = function setBackgroundColor(value)
{
div.style.backgroundColor = value;
}

this.getHandler = function getHandler()
{
return handler;
}

this.setHandler = function setHandler(value)
{
handler = value;
}

}

MyComponent.createClickHandler = function createClickHandler(component)
{
return function(event)
{
var handler = component.getHandler();
if (handler != null)
handler(event);
}
}

This "component class" can be used like this:

var container = document.getElementById("container");
var component = new MyComponent();
container.appendChild(component.generate());
....
component.setBackgroundColor("red");
component.setHandler(function(event) {alert("Stop touching me!")});

The problem, of course, is that this code will create a memory leak
in Internet Explorer. I need the component in the event handler to
get the handler dynamically, but the div is stored there too,
creating a circular reference.

One of the things I tried doing is making a DOMStorage "class" like
this:

function DOMStorage()
{
var map = new Object();

this.get = function get(id)
{
return map[id];
}

this.put = function put(id, obj)
{
map[id] = obj;
}

}

var storage = new DOMStorage(); //global

Instead of storing the div element directly in the component, I store
it under an id in the DOMStorage and use it to retrieve it later.
This actually prevented the memory leak. I don't really understand
why, because I still see a circular reference. Maybe Internet
Explorer does not count references in the global scope as a circular
reference? When I move the global storage to inside the container
object I get the memory leak again.

Unfortunately I am unable to use a global DOMStorage, because the
"component class" in instantiated many times, and they must all have
their seperate DOM elements.

Perhaps I have to generate unique ID's when I put a DOM element into
the global storage? It seems so over-the-top for something that works
perfectly fine in Firefox.

What are my alternatives?

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