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#images#request#users#network#page#still#firefox#round#trip#web

Discussion (5 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

zamadatix19 minutes ago
I feel like the option for simplicity lies between "web component" and "make 4 pages". Something near "the button changes the CSS variable controlling the size".

You lose out on pre-downscaled images but gain that the images look sharper for high DPI users and don't have to maintain the image sets or deliver multiple copies when the size changes.

recursivedoubtsabout 1 hour ago
the web platform is making slow and not-so-steady progress as a hypermedia system, but things do seem to be picking up a bit

we are working on a proposal to bring more general transclusion and a few other things here:

https://triptychproject.org

paularmstrongabout 1 hour ago
This is a weirdly unpopular opinion here when it comes to HTML & JS, but there's a time and place for everything. This is a neat small example, but hardly worth the effort of changing something that was already working fine.

With the change, I now need another roundtrip network request to get new sizes of the same content on the current page that would have been able to be done in just a couple hundred bytes of JavaScript.

Edit: also there is still no view-transition support on Firefox.

jakelazaroffabout 1 hour ago
You would have needed the round-trip network request anyway to get the new images, no?

The lack of Firefox support isn't a big deal because this is a progressive enhancement. Firefox users will still be able to switch icon sizes; they just won't see the fancy transition.

zamadatix13 minutes ago
> You would have needed the round-trip network request anyway to get the new images, no?

It'd be a shared round trip request for all images (so long as you aren't still using HTTP/1.1) in the 1st example vs a request for the immediate images and then a separate page load.

Both have their upsides/downsides depending on the rest of the page and how users usually use it.