Currently 0 won't provide instant effects as 0 is interpreted as null.

There was a proposed feature to allow 0 to to apply the result of the
effect instantly.




On 8 Oct, 09:39, Florin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't think jQuery should detect if the machine is slow (quite
> impossible, if you ask me :) ) .
> Rather, provide an option for developers to enable or disable
> animations and they can then offer this option to the users.
>
> I will try with 0 and see if that works ;).
>
> On Oct 7, 8:07 pm, "John Resig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > How would you detect if someone is on a slower machine? (Just curious)
>
> > But yes, it was discussed recently that passing in an animation speed
> > of 0 might have that effect. Another good side effect is that
> > animations can be disabled for accessibility reasons (e.g. people who
> > have extreme motion sickness).
>
> > --John
>
> > On Tue, Oct 7, 2008 at 11:00 AM, Florin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Hi,
>
> > > Animations and special effects (like fadeIn/fadeOut) are very nice,
> > > but on slower computers they don't look so good and are a serious
> > > performance issue.
>
> > > Would you consider an option to disable the animations?
>
> > > For instance, any call to animate() would just set the corresponding
> > > final CSS and call the callback, without animating through the
> > > intermediate steps ?
>
> > > Any workarounds which don't require changing the code a lot ?
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