"Enjoy or else.." brain thrown an error - threat out of context ;)

Cheers
-- Roman

On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 9:13 PM, Eneko Alonso <[email protected]>wrote:

> Hi guys,
>
> After doing some research and testing we have come up with a way to detect
> when CSS is loaded by the browser using Asset.css.
> Internet Explorer and Opera support the onload event. Webkit browsers do
> too, but Chrome never fires that event, at least not all the time (I got it
> to fire from the console a few times).
> Firefox does not support the onload event at all. Other events like
> onreadystatechange seem to work in IE and Opera.
>
> So the solution is to use events for IE and Opera and polling for Webkit
> and browsers that don't support the event.
>
> We have overriden the implementation of Asset.css. Let me know what you
> think:
> http://gist.github.com/288091
>
> Enjoy or else..
>
>
>
> On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 9:38 AM, Eneko Alonso <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> Hi there,
>>
>> The documentation says you can add an onload event to Asset.css, but
>> looking at the code, it really does not add the event. Also, doing some
>> testing, seems like the browser (Firefox 3.6) does not fire a load event
>> attached to a link element.
>> Any experience with this? Is the documentation mistaken?
>>
>> Does anyone know a way to detect when a CSS file is loaded by the browser?
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>
>


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