We're calling on all EU-based Mozillians with iOS or iPadOS devices to help us monitor Apple’s new browser choice screens. Join the effort to hold Big Tech to account!

搜索 | 用户支持

防范以用户支持为名的诈骗。我们绝对不会要求您拨打电话或发送短信,及提供任何个人信息。请使用“举报滥用”选项报告涉及违规的行为。

详细了解

Scroll is laggy in Quantum, only when console is not open

  • 5 个回答
  • 3 人有此问题
  • 1 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 davemaison

more options

I've been working on an issue at work, that requires some elements to be "sticky", so their position gets to be updated on the scroll event.

In quantum, there is a visible lag that occurs. The frustrating part is, the lag does not occur when the developer console is open or in the pre-quantum version of firefox (or any other browser).

Turning off smooth scrolling makes a small impact as the lag is reduced, however, does not fix the issue entirely, and also is not a viable option because instructing customers to change their browser settings is laughable.

This appears to be a bug, unless there is some setting i'm unaware of that can be manipulated via javascript?

I've been working on an issue at work, that requires some elements to be "sticky", so their position gets to be updated on the scroll event. In quantum, there is a visible lag that occurs. The frustrating part is, the lag does not occur when the developer console is open or in the pre-quantum version of firefox (or any other browser). Turning off smooth scrolling makes a small impact as the lag is reduced, however, does not fix the issue entirely, and also is not a viable option because instructing customers to change their browser settings is laughable. This appears to be a bug, unless there is some setting i'm unaware of that can be manipulated via javascript?

所有回复 (5)

more options

The browser all of a sudden, gave me a warning message and gave this a name: Asynchronous panning.

Then went on to explain that mozilla doesn't support dynamic styling for scrollbased events anymore: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Performance/Scroll-linked_effects

由davemaison于修改

more options

Do you have hardware acceleration turned on?

more options

tomatoshadow2 said

Do you have hardware acceleration turned on?

Yes, but that's irrelevant. In the doc file the console eventually spits out, the laggy scrolling is a direct result of how the browser handles scrolling now. Which to me was a poor decision, because quantum doesn't fully support the only viable alternative, being "position: sticky"

more options

OP is the hardware acceleration that cause this.....

more options

Xtffox said

OP is the hardware acceleration that cause this.....

I said that hardware acceleration is irrelevant earlier because you cannot instruct your users to do something special for browser "X" to get site "Y" to function properly. That's just the fastest way to lose customers.

Let's say you're just trying out quantum for the first time, and your favorite site utilizes the scroll event for styling. You will probably never use quantum again because the experience would have been so bad.

Otherwise developers have to develop with quantum specifically in mind, and that is the same exact issue that has made internet explorer terrible and unusable.

由davemaison于修改