Wednesday 19 February 2020

Do This to Improve Image Loading on Your Website

Jen Simmons explains how to improve image loading by simply using width and height attributes. The issue is that there’s a lot of jank when an image is first loaded because an img will naturally have a height of 0 before the image asset has been successfully downloaded by the browser. Then it needs to repaint the page after that which pushes all the content around. I’ve definitely seen this problem a lot on big news websites.

Anyway, Jen is recommending that we should add height and width attributes to images like so:

<img src="dog.png" height="400" width="1000" alt="A cool dog" />

This is because Firefox will now take those values into consideration and remove all the jank before the image has loaded. That means content will always stay in the same position, even if the image hasn’t loaded yet. In the past, I’ve worked on a bunch of projects where I’ve placed images lower down the page simply because I want to prevent this sort of jank. I reckon this fixes that problem quite nicely.

Direct Link to ArticlePermalink

The post Do This to Improve Image Loading on Your Website appeared first on CSS-Tricks.



from CSS-Tricks https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-d_SoCHeWE&feature=youtu.be
via IFTTT

No comments:

Post a Comment

Passkeys: What the Heck and Why?

These things called  passkeys  sure are making the rounds these days. They were a main attraction at  W3C TPAC 2022 , gained support in  Saf...