I'm not sure if that's the same (I read that page already before). A
good example
is http://www.statsmogul.com. Enter a url that is not yet in there and
see what happens (scroll
down during loading) and when all boxes are fully loaded, refresh the
page. That's exactly
what I would want to accomplish.

If cache does that it's great, but I don't think so?

Thanks!

On Jan 20, 6:45 pm, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
> I understand now. You can cache any 
> functionhttp://www.web2py.com/examples/default/examples#cache_examples
>
> You should cache the function that returns the images.
>
> Mind that if you have a of these, caching in ram may cause a memory
> leak. You probably should cache on disk or memcache (if available).
>
> On Jan 20, 11:30 am, frollings <tluy...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
>
> > No not quite it, let me try to re-explain;
>
> > I have a page, per domain that we gather statistics on for our
> > clients, 9 boxes with
> > graphs and text (IE a bunch of HTML which happens to contain 1+ image
> > each). Those 'boxes' contain content that takes time to generate (few
> > seconds per box), so I want them
> > to show AJAX loading. So every 'box' shows up (with it's html which is
> > generated in the
> > background) when it was done generating.
>
> > When another user (or the same user) revisits the page within a
> > settable (by the programmer)
> > time-out (let's say 1 day), it should show only HTML with the content
> > that was generated
> > the first time using the AJAX calls.
>
> > So the cache is not per session or user; it's per everyone viewing
> > that page for 1 day long and then it goes to generating it again.
>
> > Does that make sense?
>
> > Thanks,
>
> > Frank
>
> > On Jan 20, 5:50 pm, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
>
> > > Let me understand better,.
>
> > > You are looking at caching images. Do you want to cache per session
> > > (per user) or across sessions?
> > > Are you talking about cache serverside (when image is requested second
> > > time it not recomputed) or clientside (the client not even try to
> > > request the image the second time)? I assume the graphs are images.
> > > Are they?
>
> > > On Jan 20, 10:01 am, frollings <tluy...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > Hi,
>
> > > > I'm writing a simple statistic analysis system using web2py; when a
> > > > user requests a stats page for a certain site, it will show 9 graphs.
> > > > I want each of these 9 graphs to generate async (so the user sees 9
> > > > loading images which, randomly, turn into graphs when that specific
> > > > graph is done), but when the user re-requests, I don't want any JS/
> > > > AJAX anymore but just a static HTML showing the graphs (which all have
> > > > some text values as well).
>
> > > > What is the best pattern in web2py to accomplish this?
>
> > > > We are porting from PHP where this was implemented as a bit of a hack
> > > > (pseudocode);
>
> > > > if ($newload) {
>
> > > >           $(".stats-visits .box-content").load('result.php', array
> > > > ('id', $dom['id'], 'blk', 'stats-visits')).'");
> > > > etc
> > > > etc
>
> > > > } else {
>
> > > >  show_static($dom['id']);
>
> > > > }
>
> > > > I would imagine web2py has a nicer/better pattern for this kind of
> > > > thing?
>
> > > > Thank you
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