What is better.
You have have say 20 javascript files. 10 are shared among all pages. So they would be in the master page. Now how about these other 10? Say one pages uses 4/10 another uses 4/10 and another uses 2/10.
Would it a) be better to combine them all into one file(dynamically of course) so only one http request would be made.
or
b) have 10 combined in the master page, then all of the other pages would have there combined.
So in some my pages I would be looking at 4 or 5 java-script requests
Most of my scripts already use jquery live because I use jquery ajax tabs and I have to load all the scripts for each of the tabs at the same time.
If not every time you would go to another tab it would download a new set of the javascript so it would start doing binding events such as click X time where X is how many times the user loaded up the same tab.
Accurate, neat, attentive to detail, consistent, thorough, high standards, follows procedures.
These levels are: organizational performance, team performance and individual performance.
Depending on the language / server you are using there are lots of tools that dynamically combine the javascript files required on a page into a single request just for that page. Based on your reference to the Microsoft CDN, it sounds like you're using ASP.NET. Here's a combiner that might work for you that will combine the requests for your local JS files into a single request. If it was me, what I would do is load:
That way you get 3 parallel downloads.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With