Re: Scheduling multiple types of end-of-(micro)task work

Hello,

I agree using micro-tasks for the "regionLayoutUpdate" event is not a very good option and we should respecify the event behaviour.

One idea that comes in my mind is to specialize the "regionLayoutEvent" into something more measurable (basically, having a better answer to what are the conditions that trigger the event). My suggestion is to use the region flow ranges: the event is scheduled (I'll come back to this later) when the flow ranges in any region in the chain change. Conceptually this is similar to mutation observers - e.g. when the content of a DOM node changes, a callback can be invoked. The same way, when the fragment of content flowing into a region has changed, the "regionLayoutUpdate" event is dispatched (I quoted it because I'm not sure this name would fit it any more).

Trying to include this proposal in one of the categories James nicely defined, it unfortunately remains a layout output event. The "scheduling" issue is still here, but I think specializing the trigger condition this way allows us to simplify the wording to something like "the event is dispatched after all the effects of the range changes in the region chain have been applied" (see [1]), thus masking the fact a layout was made. However, with this wording I wonder why the event can't be made synchronous. It would become more like the "resize" event and allow real-time operations over the named flows/regions. The "regionLayoutUpdate" would also chain nicely with the "resize" event - the user resizes the window, a layout is triggered, the ranges change, regionLayoutUpdate is dispatched, other changes apply (tricky one), the resize event is dispatched.

Thoughts?

Thanks,
Andrei.

[1] http://www.w3.org/TR/DOM-Level-3-Events/#event-type-resize

On Oct 19, 2012, at 2:41 AM, James Robinson <jamesr@google.com> wrote:

> 
> 
> On Thu, Oct 18, 2012 at 4:16 PM, Jonas Sicking <jonas@sicking.cc> wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 18, 2012 at 3:34 PM, James Robinson <jamesr@google.com> wrote:
> > On Thu, Oct 18, 2012 at 3:19 PM, Alan Stearns <stearns@adobe.com> wrote:
> >> On 10/18/12 2:51 PM, "Olli Pettay" <Olli.Pettay@helsinki.fi> wrote:
> >> >On 10/19/2012 12:08 AM, Rafael Weinstein wrote:
> >> >> CSS Regions regionLayoutUpdate brings up an issue I think we need to
> >> >> get ahead of:
> >> >>
> >> >>    https://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/show_bug.cgi?id=16391
> >> >>
> >> >> For context:
> >> >> --------
> >> >> Mutation Observers are currently spec'd in DOM4
> >> >>
> >> >>      http://dom.spec.whatwg.org/#mutation-observers
> >> >>
> >> >> and delivery timing is defined in HTML
> >> >>
> >> >>
> >>
> >> >> >>http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/#perform-a-microtask-ch
> >> >>eckpoint
> >> >>
> >> >> The timing here is described as a "microtask checkpoint" and is
> >> >> conceptually "deliver all pending mutation records immediately after
> >> >> any script invocation exits".
> >> >>
> >> >> TC-39 has recently approved Object.observe
> >> >>
> >> >>      http://wiki.ecmascript.org/doku.php?id=harmony:observe
> >> >
> >> >(Not sure how that will work with native objects.)
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >>
> >> >> for inclusion in ECMAScript. It is conceptually modeled on Mutation
> >> >> Observers, and delivers all pending change records immediately
> >> >> *before* the last script stack frame exits.
> >> >>
> >> >> Additionally, although I've seen various discussion of dispatching DOM
> >> >> Events with the microtask timing, CSS regionLayoutUpdate is the first
> >> >> I'm aware of to attempt it
> >> >>
> >> >>      http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-regions/#region-flow-layout-events
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >Could you explain why microtasks are good for this case?
> >> >I would have expected something bound to animation frame callback
> >> >handling,
> >> >or perhaps just tasks (but before next layout flush or something).
> >>
> >> In the spec bug discussion, it was suggested that we use end-of-task or
> >> end-of-microtask timing. When I looked at these options, it seemed to me
> >> that the regionLayoutUpdate event was somewhat close in intent to
> >> MutationObservers. So between those two options, I picked microtask. If
> >> there's a better place to trigger the event, I'm happy to make a change to
> >> the spec.
> >>
> >> The current wording may be wrong for separate reasons anyway. The event is
> >> looking for layout changes. For instance, if the geometry of a region in
> >> the region chain is modified, and this causes either (a) overflow in the
> >> last region in the chain or (b) the last region in the chain to become
> >> empty, then we want the event to trigger so that a script can add or
> >> remove regions in the chain to make the content fit correctly. If a task
> >> in the event queue caused the change, then the microtask point after that
> >> task is probably too soon to evaluate whether the event needs to fire. And
> >> if that was the last task in the queue, then there may not be another
> >> microtask happening after layout has occurred.
> >>
> >> So what I need is an appropriate timing step for responding to layout
> >> changes. Any suggestions?
> >
> >
> > I think events based off of layout are a terrible idea and there is no good
> > timing for them.  The regions case is a good example of why not to have
> > them.  If you need javascript to respond to DOM changes then mutation
> > observers are the primitive to use.  If you just want to get callbacks at a
> > good time to update visual effects use requestAnimationFrame().
> 
> Does that mean that you think events like onresize and onscroll are
> bad? It's an honest question since I can definitely see your argument.
> 
> onresize when applied to the viewport isn't necessarily bad since it's talking about something that is input to layout (size of the window) not output.  Similarly when onscroll is used to detect interactions with the page and not changing in scroll position due to layout it's not necessarily evil.  However, both do suffer from the same issues and we've had to apply various levels of "hacks" to both.
> 
> For onscroll, after receiving many bugs we've effectively delayed firing the scroll event later and later to make sure the callstack is clean and to try to prevent it from interfering "too much" with the user's interactions.  In practice, scroll events fire after the user sees the scroll position update in Chrome in nearly all cases.  For onresize, we've definitely seen many bugs where people construct infinite loops.  I'm not sure what the current state of events is with onresize (except that it is inconsistent between browsers) but if it's firing synchronously or relatively quickly I'm sure it will be pushed out to fire later and less frequently for the same reasons as onscroll.
> 
> 
> Though I do wonder if layout events can be useful in cases where you
> don't want to be called every time the DOM changes (MutationObservers)
> or on every time the screen is painted (requestAnimationFrame).
> 
> You could use those two, specifically the latter, to replace onscroll
> and onresize. But it might end up using a lot more CPU power if you
> have to check the current scroll position or screen size on every
> painted frame. Likewise it might use a lot more CPU power if you have
> to check layout primitives on every DOM mutation.
> 
> Indeed. I think the key distinction here is whether the page is trying to listen to changes that are input to layout (the viewport dimensions changing, the user providing input leading to scrolling) from changes that are output of layout.  If a page could reliably listen to the former and then use requestAnimationFrame to schedule work they could only tick when they really need to while still reacting.
> 
> One complication here is that things that the browser considers internal to the page like an iframe or div changing size may very well be considered "external" to the author of a component embedded in a page.  This case is harder to deal with, but I still feel that the goal should be a directed flow from things that are inputs to layouts to things that are outputs.
> 
> - James
>  
> 
> People have been asking for resize events for individual elements for
> a very long time (I think it might even be implemented in some
> non-Gecko browsers). This obviously wouldn't be needed if people used
> MutationObservers and requestAnimationFrame, or MutationObservers and
> page-wide onresize. However it might save a lot of CPU power and make
> authoring a whole lot simpler if you could get called only when it was
> actually needed.
> 
> I don't know enough about CSS regions to know if the same thing
> applies there. But I would imagine there are layout changes where
> this applies.
> 
> / Jonas
> 

Received on Friday, 19 October 2012 14:54:11 UTC