I need to randomly change characters of a text and after some delay fix them.
There is my code:
<h1 id="text" style="margin-top:100px;">SOME TEXT</h1>
<script>
var text = document.getElementById("text").innerHTML.split("");
var myArr = text;
for (i = 0; i < myArr.length; ++i) {
var handle = setInterval(function () { xyz(i) }, 100);
setTimeout(function (handle) {
myArr[i] = text[i];
clearInterval(handle);
}, (i) * 1000);
}
function xyz(index) {
myArr[index] = String.fromCharCode(Math.random() * 26 + 65);
document.getElementById("text").innerHTML = myArr;
}
</script>
It seems i have no a good understanding of how setInterval work! :(
EDIT:
With my code only text[text.length+1] character has change that mean passed parameter to xyx() function is last value of loop counter variable (after loop over). Now my question is how trigger setInterval() function with i = 0 ,1 ... , text.length.
Can someone guide me?
basicly setInterval execute a function with a iteration in time. and setInterval gives you a promise to cancel it any time you want.
var myPromise = setInterval(function(){
//some code here
},delayMiliseconds);
to cancel this code
clearInterval(myPromise);
Related to this question problem was wrong way to passing arguments to setInterval().the callback function i passed to setInterval() maintains a reference to "i" rather than the snapshot value of "i" as it existed during each particular iteration...
<h1 id="text" style="margin-top:100px;">SOME TEXT</h1>
<script>
var text = document.getElementById("text").innerHTML.split("");
var myArr = document.getElementById("text").innerHTML.split("");
for (i = 0; i < text.length; i++) {
var handle = setInterval(function (k) { xyz(k) }, 100,i);
setTimeout(function (handle, i) {
console.log(i);
console.log(text[i]);
myArr[i] = text[i];
clearInterval(handle);
}, (i) * 1000,handle,i);
}
function xyz(index) {
myArr[index] = String.fromCharCode(Math.random() * 26 + 65);
document.getElementById("text").innerHTML = myArr.toString();
}
</script>
Related
This question already has answers here:
Javascript wait() function [closed]
(2 answers)
Closed 3 years ago.
I am running a for loop with a break of 1 second between each iteration:
<html>
<body>
<script>
var text = "";
var i;
// Wait function
function wait(ms){
var start = new Date().getTime();
var end = start;
while(end < start + ms) {
end = new Date().getTime();
}
}
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
text += "The number is " + i + "<br>";
wait(100)
}
</script>
<script>document.write(text)</script>
</body>
Currently, when I open the file in a web browser, the browser window is loading until the for loop has finished and then the results are displayed (five output lines). Is there a way to display the out put "as it happens". With this I mean, I open the page and every second a new line is printed.
Thank you!
You should learn about timeout and interval concepts in Javascript.
Here is code that will do the work. Examine it.
<html>
<body>
<script>
function waitAndWrite(num) {
setTimeout(() => {
let text = "The number is " + num + "<br>";
document.write(text)
}, num * 1000)
}
for (let i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
waitAndWrite(i)
}
</script>
</body>
Instead of using your own "wait" function, you could use setInterval(fn, timeout) src instead.
var i = 0;
var interval = setInterval(() => {
i = i + 1;
if(i === 5) {
clearInterval(interval);
}
document.write("Your text " + i);
}, 1000);
What you are trying to achieve manually, you can achieve the same with WindowOrWorkerGlobalScope.setTimeout():
The setTimeout() method of the WindowOrWorkerGlobalScope mixin (and successor to Window.setTimeout()) sets a timer which executes a function or specified piece of code once the timer expires.
for (let i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
setTimeout(() => document.write("The number is " + i + "<br>"), 1000 * i); // multiply the delay with i in each iteration
}
lets say I have a function in a loop that will display two different kinds of text interchangeably over and over.
Now what I want to achive is for the different text to be displayed with a delay, let's say 1 second. So it would print 1st text and after 1 second 2nd text and so on untill the loop is over. I was trying to use setTimeout and setInterval but I cannot get it to work.
var a = "hey ";
var b = "ho ";
function test(a,b){
document.getElementById('id').innerHTML += a;
document.getElementById('id').innerHTML += b;
}
for(var i = 0; i < 10; i++){
setInterval(test(a,b), 1000);
}
<div id="id">
</div>
You need to use setTimeout to introduce delay and not setInterval.
Timeout should be in incremental order so multiply it with i
test(a,b) should be in callback of the function so that setTimeout can execute it based on the delay. If you will directly write test(a,b) then it will get executed right then and there without any delay.
var a = "hey ";
var b = "ho ";
function test(a,b){
document.getElementById('id').innerHTML += a;
setTimeout(function(){
document.getElementById('id').innerHTML += b;
}, 500)
}
for(var i = 0; i < 10; i++){
setTimeout(function(){
test(a,b);
}, i*1000);
}
<div id="id">
</div>
UPDATE
Delay between document.getElementById('id')
You could use a setInterval and keep track of how many were done with a variable :
var count = 0; //Variable to keep track of the number of setInterval called
var text = ['text1','text2'];
var interval = setInterval(() => {
if(count == 10) clearInterval(interval); //Stop the setInterval when you reach the 10th time
document.getElementById('test').innerHTML = count % 2 == 0 ? text[0] : text[1];
count++; //Increment your var
},1000);
<div id="test"></div>
You can use an "asynchonous" loop for this, i.e. a function that calls itself after a time out. Then use the modulo operator to decide whether to show a or b:
var a = "hey ";
var b = "ho ";
function test(c){
document.getElementById('id').innerHTML += c;
}
(function loop(i){
if (i >= 10) return; // All done
test(i%2 ? b : a); // choose which one to show
setTimeout(loop.bind(null, i+1), 1000); // Repeat with delay and incremented i.
})(0); // Start the loop immediately with i=0
<div id="id">
</div>
function loop(i, limit) {
if (i < limit) {
console.log('Text 1');
setTimeout(function() {
console.log('Text 2');
setTimeout(function() {
loop(++i,limit);
},1000);
},1000);
}
}
loop(0,3);
You need to change your code around a bit to introduce a delay between each.
The code below:
stores the possible values in the array
has a method which will display the ith element from the values
has a run method used to start the loop, and also recalled with a delay (1second) having incremented a counter
var values = ["hey","ho"];
var index = 0;
function display(i){
document.getElementById('id').innerHTML = values[i];
}
function run(){
display(index%values.length)
if(++index<10){
setTimeout(run,1000);
}
}
run();
<div id="id">
</div>
If you want the timeout between 'hey' and 'ho' also, you shouldn't be keeping both of them inside test, instead keep only one and change the param value.
var a = "hey ";
var b = "ho ";
function test(a){
document.getElementById('id').innerHTML += a;
}
for(var i = 0; i < 10; i++){
(function(i) {
setTimeout(function(){
test(i % 2 === 0 ? a : b);
}, i*1000);
}(i))
}
<div id="id">
</div>
Please find my code below.
for (i= 0; i < region.length; i++) {
point = region[i];
animation = setInterval(function () {
..........
}, 12);
}
I want to execute the codes in setInterval before i value changes from 0 to 1. But currently after all the execution of for loop only, codes in the setInterval method is getting executed. is there any way to achieve my requirement.
Use closure inside for loop:
(function(i) {
setInterval(function() {
console.log("inside setinterval" + i)
}, 10);
})(i)
hope this solves your problem
Async loop you need:
var len = region.length;
var i = 0;
var animate = function(){
setTimeout(function () {
point = region[i];
//do something..........
if (i++ < len) animate();
}, 12);
};
You should use recursion for such requirements. Also, you should use setTimeout as setInterval will run for eternity(till page exists) until you clear it.
var i = 0;
var MAX_COUNT = 10;
function doSomething(str){
console.log(str);
processData();
}
function initSetTimeout(callback){
setTimeout(callback, 1000)
}
function processData(){
if(++i<MAX_COUNT)
initSetTimeout(doSomething.bind(null, i))
}
processData()
I have a bunch of testimonials for my site which are currently on a page and am trying to get a div to display each 1 at an interval of 5 seconds, if the array reaches the last value it should start back to beginning of the array again.
Here is what I have so far...
var testimonial = new Array();
testimonial[1] = "Rugby";
testimonial[2] = "Baseball";
testimonial[3] = "Cricket";
var length = testimonial.length
var i = 1;
setInterval(function() {
while (i <= length) {
$('#testimonials p').html(testimonial[i]);
++i;
if (i == length) {
i == 1;
}
}
}, 5000);
Any help would be great, thanks.
Try
var testimonial = ['Rugby', 'Baseball', 'Cricket'];
var numTestimonials = testimonial.length;
var index = 0;
setInterval(function() {
$('#testimonials p').text(testimonial[index]);
index = (index + 1) % numTestimonials;
}, 5000);
JavaScript arrays are 0-indexed and have handy array literal syntax. Using the modulus operator (%) is an idiomatic way of wrapping a counter back to 0 once it reaches a certain value.
You can try
setInterval(function() {
$('div').html(test[ (i = (i + 1) % length) ]) },
5000);
The function in setInterval is being called every 5 seconds. That means you display the 5 testimonials one after another really quick every 5 seconds instead of displaying them one after the other.
You should do something like:
var testimonial = new Array();
testimonial[1] = "Rugby";
testimonial[2] = "Baseball";
testimonial[3] = "Cricket";
var length = testimonial.length
var i = 0; // arrays start with 0
setInterval(function() {
$('#testimonials p').html(testimonial[i]);
i++;
if (i == length) i = 0;
}, 5000);
Many interesting answers, so one more won't hurt. :-)
You can bundle it all up in an immediately called function expression:
(function() {
var testimonials = ['Rugby', 'Baseball', 'Cricket'];
var i = 0;
setInterval(function() {
$('#testimonials p').text(testimonials[++i % testimonials.length]);
}, 5000);
}());
This question already has answers here:
setTimeout in for-loop does not print consecutive values [duplicate]
(10 answers)
Closed 7 years ago.
I want a string to appear character-for-character with the following code:
function initText()
{
var textScroller = document.getElementById('textScroller');
var text = 'Hello how are you?';
for(c = 0; c < text.length; c++)
{
setTimeout('textScroller.innerHTML += text[c]', 1000);
}
}
window.onload = initText;
It's not working.. what am I doing wrong?
Try something like this:
function initText()
{
var textScroller = document.getElementById('textScroller');
var text = 'Hello how are you?';
var c = 0;
var interval = setInterval(function() {
textScroller.innerHTML += text[c];
c++;
if(c >= text.length) clearInterval(interval);
}, 1000);
}
Note I added clearInterval to stop it when it's needed.
Currently, you are defining 18 timeouts and all will be executed ~ at once.
Second problem is, you pass instructions to execute as a String. In that case, the code won't have access to all variables defined in initText, because evaluated code will be executed in global scope.
IMO, this should do the job
function initText(){
var textScroller = document.getElementById('textScroller');
var text = 'Hello how are you?';
var c = 0;
(function(){
textScroller.innerHTML += text.charAt(c++);
if(text.length > c){
setTimeout(arguments.callee, 1000);
}
})();
}
Even more generic than answer by #yauhen-yakimovich:
Using Timeout:
var repeat = (function () {
return function repeat(cbWhileNotTrue, period) {
/// <summary>Continuously repeats callback after a period has passed, until the callback triggers a stop by returning true. Note each repetition only fires after the callback has completed. Identifier returned is an object, prematurely stop like `timer = repeat(...); clearTimeout(timer.t);`</summary>
var timer = {}, fn = function () {
if (true === cbWhileNotTrue()) {
return clearTimeout(timer.t); // no more repeat
}
timer.t = setTimeout(fn, period || 1000);
};
fn(); // engage
return timer; // and expose stopper object
};
})();
Using Interval:
var loop = (function () {
return function loop(cbWhileNotTrue, period) {
/// <summary>Continuously performs a callback once every period, until the callback triggers a stop by returning true. Note that regardless of how long the callback takes, it will be triggered once per period.</summary>
var timer = setInterval(function () {
if (true === cbWhileNotTrue()) clearInterval(timer);
}, period || 1000);
return timer; // expose stopper
};
})();
Slight difference between the two indicated in comments -- the repeat method only repeats after the callback performs, so if you have a "slow" callback it won't run every delay ms, but repeats after every delay between executions, whereas the loop method will fire the callback every delay ms. To prematurely stop, repeat uses an object as the returned identifier, so use clearTimeout(timer.t) instead.
Usage:
Just like answer by #soufiane-hassou:
var textScroller = document.getElementById('textScroller');
var text = 'Hello how are you?';
var c = 0;
var interval = repeat/* or loop */(function() {
textScroller.innerHTML += text[c];
c++;
return (c >= text.length);
}, 1000);
As mentioned, premature stopping would be:
/* if repeat */ clearTimeout(interval.t);
/* if loop */ clearInterval(interval);
Try this:
function initText()
{
var textScroller = document.getElementById('textScroller');
var text = 'Hello how are you?';
for(c = 0; c < text.length; c++)
{
setTimeout("textScroller.innerHTML += '" + text[c] + "'", 1000 + c*200);
}
}
window.onload = initText;
Try using a closure:
function init() {
var textScroller = document.getElementById('textScroller');
var text = 'Hello how are you?';
var c = 0;
function run() {
textScroller.innerHTML += text[c++];
if (c<text.length)
setTimeout(run, 1000);
}
setTimeout(run, 1000);
}
init()
The problem in your code is that the code you put in the string will run in the global context, where textScroller is not defined (it is defined inside your function).
I want to share a snippet (based on answer by Soufiane Hassou). It extends to the case when you literally replace a for-loop body to be iterated over some array in a fixed interval of time. Basically same synchronous loop but with "sleep" pausing (because javascript is not a synchronous programming language).
function loop(arr, take, period) {
period = period || 1000;
var i = 0;
var interval = setInterval(function() {
take(i, arr[i]);
if (++i >= arr.length) { clearInterval(interval);}
}, period);
}
Usage example:
loop([1, 2, 3, 4], function(index, elem){
console.log('arr[' + index + ']: ' + elem);
});
Tested in Node JS. Hope that helps someone.
edit>
the following update makes code usable together with libs doing heavy "prototyping" (like jQuery or prototype):
function loop(arr, take, period) {
period = period || 1000;
var scope = {
i: 0,
arr: arr,
take: take,
};
var iterate = (function iterate() {
if (this.i >= this.arr.length) { clearInterval(this.interval); return}
take(this.i, this.arr[this.i++]);
}).bind(scope);
scope.interval = setInterval(iterate, period);
}
Your for loop is setting a timeout for every character at once, so they will not appear in sequence, but all at once. Your setTimeout should include code to another setTimeout that will include the next character to display.
So something like this (didn't test this)
function initText()
{
var textScroller = document.getElementById('textScroller');
var text = 'Hello how are you?';
setTimeout('nextChar(text)', 1000);
}
function nextChar(text){
if(text.length > 0){
textScroller.innerHTML += text[0];
setTimeout('nextChar(text.substring(1))', 1000);
}
}
If you want to preserve setTimeOut (instead of setInterval) and use named function (instead of evaluating code block in setTimeOut call), then this could be helpful:
var b = {
textScroller: document.getElementById('textScroller'),
text: "Hello how are you?"
};
function initText() {
for(c = 0; c < b.text.length; c++) {
setTimeout("append("+c+")", 1000 + c*200);
}
}
function append(c) {
b.textScroller.innerHTML += b.text[c];
}
window.onload = initText;
With the above you can pass a parameter to append function.
To pass several parameters the next code does the trick:
var glo = [];
function initText()
{
var textScroller = document.getElementById('textScroller');
var text = "Hello how are you?";
var timeout_time;
for(c = 0; c < text.length; c++) {
glo[glo.length] = {text:text, c:c, textScroller:textScroller};
timeout_time = 1000 + c * 200;
setTimeout("append(" + (glo.length - 1) + ")", timeout_time);
}
}
function append(i)
{
var obj = glo[i];
obj.textScroller.innerHTML += obj.text[obj.c];
obj = null;
glo[i] = null;
}
window.onload = initText;
With the above you have only one global array glo. In loop you create new array members to glo and in append() function refer to these members using index which is passed as parameter.
CAUTION: the second code sample is not meant as best or most suitable solution to OP:s problem, but may benefit in other setTimeOut relative problems, eg. when someone wants to make a presentation or performance test where some functionalities are needed to call after some delay. The advantage of this code is to make use of for loops (many coders want to use for loops) and the possibility to use also inner loops and the ability to "send" local variables in their loop time state to timeOut functions.
May be better to loop in cascade. For exemple to fade a div :
div=document.createElement('div');
div.style.opacity=1;
setTimeout(function(){fade(1);},3000);
function fade(op){
op-=.05;
if(op>0) setTimeout(function(){div.style.opacity=op;fade(op);},30);
else document.body.removeChild(div);
}