will make pages load faster , read the yahoo link which i postedwhy would you do that?
The examples shows the point.
JS on top - nothing after the javascript can load without first loading the javascript
JS on bottom - the entire html of the page loads so the user can start looking at content then when the js loads then can the javascript features be used.
That page is designed to take 10 seconds to load.
JS on top - 8 seconds for js then the other 2 for content
JS on bottom - 2 secs for content first then 8 seconds for JS
Which would you rather see first?
There are many ways to load javascript without blocking the contents of the page. Here are some from a book i bought "High Performance Websites". I'm guessing async load is equal to the first one "XHR Eval" since it's loading javascript via ajax.
• XHR Eval
• XHR Injection
• Script in Iframe
• Script DOM Element
• Script Defer
• document.write Script Tag
It already has CDN capabilities; they're using local to save time during the alpha.Was just about to suggest this myself - please consider it
Even with the Javascript fully cached, it produces a noticeable speed increase.
this is good news - a millisecond/second here and there all adds up to a FASTER xenforoActually, the TinyMCE init code has recently changed, so it we may be able to revisit it.
Especially once you start getting tons of traffic/views, then those seconds can REALLY add up!this is good news - a millisecond/second here and there all adds up to a FASTER xenforo
mike, any update on this ?Actually, the TinyMCE init code has recently changed, so it we may be able to revisit it.
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