- Source: Lazy loading
Lazy loading (also known as asynchronous loading) is a technique used in computer programming, especially web design and web development, to defer initialization of an object until it is needed. It can contribute to efficiency in the program's operation if properly and appropriately used. This makes it ideal in use cases where network content is accessed and initialization times are to be kept at a minimum, such as in the case of web pages. For example, deferring loading of images on a web page until they are needed for viewing can make the initial display of the web page faster. The opposite of lazy loading is eager loading.
Examples
= With web frameworks
=Prior to being established as a web standard, web frameworks were generally used to implement lazy loading.
One of these is Angular. Since lazy loading decreases bandwidth and subsequently server resources, it is a strong contender to implement in a website, especially in order to improve user retention by having less delay when loading the page, which may also improve search engine optimization (SEO).
Below is an example of lazy loading being used in Angular, programmed in TypeScript from Farata Systems
= As a web standard
=Since 2020, major web browsers have enabled native handling of lazy loading by default.
This allows lazy loading to be incorporated into a webpage by adding HTML attributes.
The loading attribute support two values, lazy and eager. Setting the value to lazy will fetch the resource only when it is required (such as when an image scrolls into view when a user scrolls down), while setting it to eager, the default state, the resource will be immediately loaded.
Methods
There are four common ways of implementing the lazy load design pattern: lazy initialization; a virtual proxy; a ghost, and a value holder. Each has its own advantages and disadvantages.
= Lazy initialization
=With lazy initialization, the object is first set to null.
Whenever the object is requested, the object is checked, and if it is null, the object is then immediately created and returned.
For example, lazy loading for a widget can be implemented in the C# programming language as such:
Or alternatively, with the null-coalescing assignment operator ??=
This method is the simplest to implement, although if null is a legitimate return value, it may be necessary to use a placeholder object to signal that it has not been initialized. If this method is used in a multithreaded application, synchronization must be used to avoid race conditions.
= Virtual proxy
=A virtual proxy is an object with the same interface as the real object. The first time one of its methods is called it loads the real object and then delegates.
= Ghost
=A ghost is the object that is to be loaded in a partial state. It may initially only contain the object's identifier, but it loads its own data the first time one of its properties is accessed. For example, consider that a user is about to request content via an online form. At the time of creation, the only information available is that content will be accessed, but the specific action and content is unknown.
An example in PHP:
= Value holder
=A value holder is a generic object that handles the lazy loading behavior, and appears in place of the object's data fields:
See also
Software design pattern
Dynamic loading
Proxy pattern
Lazy evaluation
Lazy initialization
References
External links
Lazy Loading, Mozilla Developer Network
URLs, WHATWG HTML Standard
JS Lazy Loading
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- WordPress
- Graph database
- Lazy loading
- Lazy initialization
- Identity map pattern
- Demand paging
- Dynamic loading
- Hugging Face
- WordPress
- Single-page application
- Google Chrome
- Hibernate (framework)