I have a website that is very simple, but very long -- a lot of text that could be scrolled through. It\'s a documentation site, and considering the nature of the content (a lot
I think I fixed it!
The problem, as suspected, was rendering/painting caused by CSS layout. At phone-size, I had been hiding the content of each entry until it was selected; and the method I had been using to hide them, and remove any trace of them from the layout, included position: absolute
. I didn't initially use display: none
because of typical concerns about wanting to not see content but keep it there, for various readers and reasons. I threw those concerns aside and changed the layout so that the entries were hidden with display: none
and shown with display: block
-- and that seems to have fixed the crashing.
I think the absolute positioning was stacking a huge amount of content in the corner of the screen, and although it wasn't visible, it was demanding memory.
What clued me in to trying this was an answer to another related question, linked to above by @tea_totaler: https://stackoverflow.com/a/14866503/2284669. It says:
What tends to help me a lot is to keep anything that is not visible at this time under display: none. This might sound primitive but actually does the trick. It's a simple way to tell the renderer of the browser that you don't need this element at this time and therefore releases memory. This allows you to create mile long vertical scrollers with all sorts of 3d effects as long as you hide elements that you are not using at this time.
I think that my other hiding method was not releasing memory, despite its other advantages (which were possibly irrelevant to this particular site anyway). I'm sure it became a problem only because the site was so long.
That's something to consider, though, when you want to hide an element: rendering/memory demands.