- From: Schalk Neethling <schalk@ossreleasefeed.com>
- Date: Sun, 23 May 2010 14:30:32 +0200
Jip, using $(window).load() works perfect. -----Original Message----- From: Eduard Pascual [mailto:herenvardo@gmail.com] Sent: Sunday, May 23, 2010 12:33 PM To: Schalk Neethling Cc: whatwg at lists.whatwg.org Subject: Re: [whatwg] Canvas and Image problems On Sun, May 23, 2010 at 12:16 PM, Schalk Neethling <schalk at ossreleasefeed.com> wrote: > Hi everyone, > > > > Having a really weird problem that I would like some input on. I am > trying to draw an image, as well as video, onto canvas. I use the > simple code > below: > > > > $(document).ready(function() { > > ????? var image = $("#cat").get(0); > > > > ????? var cv = $("#img_container").get(0); > > ????? var ctx = cv.getContext('2d'); > > > > ????? ctx.drawImage(image, 0, 0); > > }); > > > > When I load up the HTML page in Chrome absolutely nothing happens and > I see no errors in the JavaScript console. When running it in Firefox > 3.6.3 I get the following error: > > > > uncaught exception: [Exception... "Component returned failure code: > 0x80040111 (NS_ERROR_NOT_AVAILABLE) > [nsIDOMCanvasRenderingContext2D.drawImage]" nsresult: "0x80040111 > (NS_ERROR_NOT_AVAILABLE)" location: "JS frame :: > file:///C:/thelab/HTML5Canvas/scripts/canvas_img.js :: anonymous :: line 9" > data: no] > > > > For The life of me I cannot see what I am doing wrong with the above. > I have done console logs to ensure that the code get?s the image as > well as the canvas on the relevant lines and it definitely does. > Anything I am overlooking? IIRC correctly, jQuery's document ready event is fired as soon as the HTML itself is loaded and the DOM is built, unlike <html>'s onload which waits also for all external stuff (CSS, JS, images, etc) to be available. This is a good thing to speed up things that don't depend on external content but, in your case, it seems you are trying to use the src resource of an <img> element before it's available. I'm no jQuery expert, so I can't tell for sure; but you may check it out by running your code from <html>'s onload event instead of the document ready event. Regards, Eduard Pascual
Received on Sunday, 23 May 2010 05:30:32 UTC