Nice!
On 2008-05-09, at 12:47 EDT, Henry Minsky wrote:
Turning off the debug flag in the swf9 app brings the startup time
down to
about 1100 msecs, in my player, which is roughly a 20% speedup.
On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 12:44 PM, Henry Minsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
wrote:
Yes, the debug flag is set in the swf9 compiles unconditionally
right now.
We need to get the debug flag working
properly for swf9, so that can be turned off easily.
On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 11:53 AM, David Temkin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
wrote:
The numbers are interesting. I would expect/hope that SWF9 is
faster than
WebKit for obvious reasons.
When I start the SWF9 app I get prompted with "Where is the
debugger or
host applicaiton running?". Does that mean this is a debug build?
On Thu, May 8, 2008 at 6:16 PM, Henry Minsky wrote:
I compiled a test app with 100 slider components in it, for swf8,
swf9,
and dhtml, and measures the startup time
according to the <inittimer/> tool (measures time from app start
to the
canvas oninit event).
swf9 1400 +/- 1000msec
dhtml (webkit) 1440 +/- 50msec
dhtml (firefox) 4000 msec
swf8 6000 msec
dhtml (opera) 14000-27000 msec (something must be wrong
here...)
Once the app is running, there are 100 constraints to tie the
sliders
together with the first one, and there
is no perceptible lag when sliding it in all except the opera/dhtml
runtime.
--
Henry Minsky
Software Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--
Henry Minsky
Software Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
Henry Minsky
Software Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED]