It seems there is no way to have scripts run after everything else. Normally I’d use window.onload or similar things, but all that’s been and gone by the time any script is run anyway. So I tried defer
. Normally defer means that script will run after non-defer scripts. That would be useful, but the defer
attribute isn’t heeded by the engine, currently.
https://perchance.org/085unhhfqe#edit
For now I’m going to try using a [code block]
just to have it run later. But obviously that won’t be sufficient for all situations. So it still would be useful to have some callback or addEventListener thingy to use to run code after perchance has done everything it does.
Thanks! Fixed. Note though RE your example generator, the
defer
attribute is not valid for ‘inline’ scripts - it’s only valid for URL/remote scripts (i.e. usingsrc
attribute instead of writing text between the opening and closing script tags). Here are some options for running code after everything else has executed:document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() { yourCodeHere })
- this is usually your best option (and by coincidence was already supported, since Cocell reported a similar issue a week or so ago)window.addEventListener("load", function() { yourCodeHere })
- same aswindow.onload = function() { yourCodeHere }
butaddEventListener
a much better approach because it doesn’t overwrite theonload
function that might have been set by some other code (e.g. if you’re writing a plugin, you might overwrite the importer’sonload
function that they set). With theaddEventListener
approach you can add as many as you want. But in general usingwindow
’sload
event isn’t desirable because it also waits for stuff like images to finish loading before triggering. But if that’s what you want, then use this.- As you mentioned, you can put a square block at the end of the HTML panel like
[ yourCodeHere ]
, but note that this will run again after everyupdate()
. If you only want it to run once, you’d have to write something like[doneStuffAlready ? "" : doStuff(), doneStuffAlready=true]
Oooooh, okay. Honestly, while I’ve been in web dev a while, I’ve never really needed or used defer, so never really looked into it properly; I just know it exists. That’s an annoying caveat isn’t it? 😅
I thought I’d tried onload–that was the first thing I tried–but it didn’t work. I’ll try these things again and nail down exactly what does and doesn’t work for myself.
I thought I’d tried onload
Yep you’re not imagining it - by “Thanks! Fixed” I meant that I fixed both
defer
and the windowload
event.DOMContentLoaded
was the only thing that was working properly before this bug report.By the way it’s not fully working. Works in edit mode with the preview, doesn’t work on the actual page! 😬
Here’s a test: https://perchance.org/67nt9sbun6#edit
Seems to be working fine for me in both cases - i.e. I see “loaded” alert when I load the page with and without
at the end of the URL. Can you give more details? I’ve tested in Chrome and Firefox.
I’m on Chrome. 126.0.6478.214 (Official Build) (64-bit)
For me, it only alerts when I click Reload or click Auto. Doesn’t alert when I open the editing page. Doesn’t alert when I go to the main page. https://imgur.com/a/jEv8ZS5
Hmm, I’m not sure what’s going on there. Can’t seem to replicate. Which OS? I tested on Ubuntu, Windows, and an old Chromebook.
Can you try swapping it for a console.log instead of alert? I figure there’s a small chance that it’s a ‘user agent intervention’ where it hides the alert due to it seeming like a spammy thing.
Chromebook. Same issue for
console.log()
. Anddebugger
.I guess you’re manually running it somehow?
Ah okay great 👍
Can confirm, the load even works for me now 👍