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Home/ Questions/Q 778907
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T19:50:32+00:00 2026-05-14T19:50:32+00:00

what is the best practice for this scenario: 1) User clicks Sort huge javascript

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what is the best practice for this scenario:
1) User clicks “Sort huge javascript array”
2) Browser shows “Sorting…” through element.innerHTML=”Sorting”
3) Browser sorts huge javascript array (100% CPU for several seconds) while displaying “Sorting…” message.
4) Browser shows result.

Pseudo code:

...
<a href="#" onclick="sortHugeArray();return false">Sort huge array</a>
...
function sortHugeArray(){
  document.getElementById("progress").innerHTML="Sorting...";
  ...do huge sort ...
  ...render result...
  document.getElementById("progress").innerHTML=result;
}

When i do that this way, browser never shows “Sorting…”, it freezes browser for several seconds and shows result without noticing user…

Thank you for advice.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T19:50:33+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 7:50 pm

    You have to return control to the browser to let it update any changes on-screen. Use a timeout to ask it to return control to you.

    function sortHugeArray(){
        document.getElementById("progress").innerHTML="Sorting...";
        setTimeout(function() {
            ...do huge sort ...
            ...render result...
            document.getElementById("progress").innerHTML=result;
        }, 0);
    }
    

    It’s a bit questionable to be executing a script for ‘several seconds’, though. There should be a way to speed that up, or break the process into parts returning control with a timeout every so often to keep the page responsive.

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