AngularJS really slow at rendering with about 2000 elements?

|▌冷眼眸甩不掉的悲伤 提交于 2019-11-28 03:51:05
alecxe

In AngularJS 1.3+, there is One-time binding built-in:

The main purpose of one-time binding expression is to provide a way to create a binding that gets deregistered and frees up resources once the binding is stabilized. Reducing the number of expressions being watched makes the digest loop faster and allows more information to be displayed at the same time.

In order to make the one-time binding, prepend :: to the binding value:

<div>{{::name}}</div> 

Also see relevant discussions:

You should look at bindonce if you don't need to update the UI after the data has been bound to it. bindonce can also wait until an object has been loaded and then do the binding. It will save you a bunch of time and reduce your $watch()es dramatically when used right.

Stewie

That's due to how AngularJS does dirty checking. Here's a definitive answer to slow rendering with AngularJS.

Using this project: angular-vs-repeat will boost up your performance.

With this, the browser will render (thus angular will do its dirty-checking) to only so many elements that fit in the scrollable container where you render the elements. Demo here

I realize this is an old question but I don't think an answer has been posted yet.

I believe the reason your form is slow is not just that you have 2,000+ elements but that those elements are form elements using ng-model. The built in form validation in Angular is very powerful and convenient but can behave very slowly especially when you first load the form. If those 180(6x30) input elements used something like ng-checked instead of ng-model, avoiding form validation mechanism, then you form should load much faster.

<input type="checkbox" ng-checked="filter.enabled">{{filter.Name}}

Reducing watchers with one-time binding via :: will also help the situation but I think your main issue is with ng-model and angular form validation.

Kris Roofe

With about 2000 items to load, you needn't to render them all at once. You can aggressively render them when page scroll, or change page. Refer to this question

Use unique id such as filter id to minimize the time of ng-repeat's creation of all the dom. Refer to tracking-and-duplicates

As the answer of alecxe above, use one-time bounding, if that not proper for you, you can slow the digest frequency with such ng-model-options="{ debounce: 200 } angular option settings

And last, you have to use some performance analyser tools to track the bottleneck of the application, and fix them.

Hope this helps.

ng-repeat="filter in group.Filters | track by:filter.id | limitTo: NumPerOperation"

Using these two angular modules you can make the renderization of your tables much faster.

"quick-ng-repeat" https://github.com/allaud/quick-ng-repeat

"infinite-scroll" https://github.com/infinite-scroll/infinite-scroll

Just be aware this is not a solution to improve the performance of your "ng-repeat", this is just a different approach to make your tables faster.

leopiazzoli

Substitute ng-repeat="group in Model.Groups" with collection-repeat="group in Model.Groups".

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