Web2.0 came with AJAX and AJAX came with its own requirements and standards for web application developers. Now web applications are more like desktop applications with a lot of options, dialogs and more. If you have developed AJAX application with different user controls you surely loaded resources such images, other javascript files on demand. This helps you keep your application lightweight and makes its load time faster.

jQuery makes creation and loading DOM elements (in our case images) very easy. If you need to preload an image you can use this jQuery script here:

// Create an image element var image1 = $('<img />').attr('src', 'imageURL.jpg');

First jQuery creates a image DOM element and setting the src attribute of the image element would tell the user browser to load that image. Thus preloading the image.

Next you should insert your DOM element into the DOM tree using one of the many jQuery DOM manipulation methods.

Here are some examples of how you could insert preloaded image into your website:

var image1 = $('<img />').attr('src', 'imageURL.jpg'); // Insert preloaded image into the DOM tree $('.profile').append(image1); // OR image1.appendTo('.profile');

But the best way is to use a callback function, so it inserts the preloaded image into the application when it has completed loading. To achieve this simply use .load() jQuery event.

// Insert preloaded image after it finishes loading $('<img />') .attr('src', 'imageURL.jpg') .load(function(){ $('.profile').append( $(this) ); // Your other custom code });

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