Building Flickr’s new Hybrid Signed-Out Homepage

Adventures in Frontend-Landia

tl;dr: Chrome’s DevTools: still awesome. Test carefully on small screens, mobile/tablets. Progressively enhance “extraneous”, but shiny, features where appropriate.

Building a fast, fun Slideshow / Web Page Hybrid

Every so often, dear reader, you may find yourself with a unique opportunity. Sometimes it’s a chance to take on some crazy ideas, break the rules and perhaps get away with some front-end skullduggery that wouldn’t be allowed, nor encouraged under normal circumstances. In this instance, Flickr’s newest Signed-Out Homepage turned out to be just that sort of thing.

The 2014 signed-out flickr.com experience (flickr.com/new/) is a hybrid, interactive blend of slideshow and web page combining scroll and scaling tricks, all the while highlighting the lovely new Flickr mobile apps for Android and iPhone with UI demos shown via inline HTML5 video and JS/CSS-based effects.

Flickr.com scroll-through demo

Features

In 2013, we covered performance details of developing a vertical-scrolling page using some parallax effects, targeting and optimizing for a smooth experience. In 2014, we are using some of the same techniques, but have added some new twists and tricks. In addition, there is more consideration for some smaller screens this year, given the popularity of tablet and other portable devices.

Briefly:

  • Fluid slideshow-like UI, scale3d() and zoom-based scaling of content for larger screens

  • Inline HTML5 <video>, “retina” / hi-DPI scale (with fallback considerations)

  • Timeline-based HTML transition effects, synced to HTML5 video

  • “Hijacking” of touch/mouse/keyboard scroll actions, where appropriate to experience

  • Background parallax, scale/zoom and blur effects (where supported)

Usability Considerations: Scrolling

In line with current trends, our designers intended to have a slideshow-like experience. The page was to be split into multiple “slides” of a larger presentation, with perhaps some additional navigation elements and cues to help the user move between slides.

Out in the wild, implementations of the slideshow-style web page widely in their flexibility. Controlling the presentation like this is challenging and dangerous from a technical perspective, as the first thing you are doing is trying to prevent the browser from doing what it does well (arbitrary bi-directional scrolling, in either staggered steps or smooth inertia-based increments depending on the method used) in favour of your own method which is more likely to have holes in its implementation.

If you’re going to hijack a basic interaction like scrolling, attention to detail is critical. Because you’ve built something non-standard, even in the best case the user may notice and think, “That’s not how it normally scrolls, but it responded and now I’m seeing the next page.” If you’re lucky, they could be using a touchpad to scroll and may barely notice the difference.

By carefully managing the display of content to fit the screen and accounting for common scroll actions, we are able to confidently override the browser’s default scroll behaviour in most cases to present a unique experience that’s a hybrid of web page and slideshow.

The implementation itself is fairly straightforward; you can listen to the mouse wheel event (triggered both by physical wheels and touchpads), determine which direction the user is moving in, debounce further wheel events and then run an animation to transition to the next slide. It’s imperfect and subject to double-scrolling, but most users will not “throw” the scroll so hard that it retains enough inertia and continues to fire after your animation ends.

Additionally, if the user is on an OS that shows a scrollbar (i.e., non-OS X or OS X with a mouse plugged in), they should be able to grab and drag the scrollbar and navigate through the page that way. Don’t even try messing with that stuff – your users will kill you with pitchforks, ensuring you will be sent to Web Developer Usability Anti-Pattern Hell. You will not pass Go, and will not collect $200.

Content Sizing

In order to get a slideshow-like experience, each “slide” had to be designed to fit within common viewport dimensions. We assumed roughly 1024×768, but ended up targeting a minimum viewport height of around 600px – roughly what you’d get on a typical 13″ MacBook laptop with a maximized window and a visible dock. In retrospect, that doesn’t feel like a whole lot of space; it’s important to consider if you’re also aiming to display your work on mobile screens, as well.

Once each slide fit within our target dimensions, the positioning of each slide’s content could be tightly controlled. Each is in a relatively-positioned container so they stack vertically as normal, and the height is at minimum, the height of the viewport or the natural offsetHeight dictated by the content itself. Reasonable defaults are first assigned by CSS, and future updates are done via JS at initial render and on window.resize().

With each slide being one viewport high, one might assume we could then let the user scroll freely through the content, perusing at will. We decided to go against this and control the scrolling for a few reasons.

  • Web browsers’ default “page down” (spacebar or page up/down keys, etc.) does not scroll through 100% of the viewport, as we would want in this case; there is always some overlap from the previous page. While this is completely logical considering the context of reading a document, etc., we want to scroll precisely to the beginning of the next frame. Thus, we use JS to animate and set scrollTop.

  • Content does not normally shift vertically when the user resizes their browser, but will now due to JS adjusting each slide’s height to fit the viewport as mentioned. Thus, we must also adjust scrollTop to re-align to the current slide, preventing the content from shifting as the user resizes the window. Sneaky.

  • We want to know when a user enters and leaves a slide, so we can play or reset HTML5 <video> elements and related animations as appropriate. By controlling scroll, we have discrete events for both.

Content Scaling

Given that we know the dimensions of our content and the dimensions of the browser viewport, we are able to “zoom” each slide’s absolutely-positioned content to fit nicely within the viewport of larger screens. This is a potential minefield-type feature, but can be applied selectively after careful testing. Just like min and max-width, you can implement your own form of min-scale and max-scale.

Content Scaling demo

Avoiding Pixelation

Scaling raster-based content, of course, is subject to degrading pretty quickly in terms of visual quality. To help combat pixelation, scaling is limited to a reasonable maximum – i.e., 150% – and where practical, retina/hi-DPI (@2x) assets are used for elements like icons, logos and so forth, regardless of screen type. This works rather well on standard LCDs. On the hi-DPI side, thankfully, huge retina screens are not common and there is less potential for scaling.

Depending on browser, content scaling can be done via scale3d() or the old DOM .style.zoom property (yes, it wasn’t just meant for triggering layout in old IE.) From my findings, Webkit appears to rasterize all content before scaling it. As a result, vector-based content like text is blurred in Webkit when using scale3d(). Thus, Wekbit gets the older .style.zoom approach. Firefox doesn’t support .style.zoom, but does render crisp text when using scale3d().

There are few tricks to getting scaling to work, short of updating it alongside initial render and window.resize() events. overflow: hidden may need to be applied to the frame container, in the scale3d() case.

JS Performance: window.onscroll() and window.onresize()

It’s no secret: scroll and resize are two popular JavaScript events that can cause a lot of layout thrashing. Some cost is incurred by the browser’s own layout, decoding of images, compositing and painting, but most notable thrashing is caused by developers attaching expensive UI refresh-related functions to these events. Parallax effects on scrolling is a popular example, but resize can trigger it as well.

In this case, synchronous code fires on resize so that the frames immediately resize themselves to fit the new window dimensions, and the window’s scrollTop property is adjusted to prevent any vertical shift of content. This is expensive, but is justified in keeping the view consistent with what the user would expect during resize.

Scroll events on this page are throttled (that is, there is not a 1:1 event-firing-to-code-running ratio) so that the parallax, zoom and blur effects on the page – which can be expensive when combined – are updated at a lower, yet still responsive interval, thus lowering the load on rendering during scroll.

Fun stuff: Background sizing, Parallax, Scale-based Motion, Blur Effects via Opacity, Video/HTML Timelines

The parallax thing has been done before, by Flickr and countless other web sites. This year, some twists on the style included a gradual blur effect introduced as the user scrolls down the page, and in some cases, a slight motion effect via scaling.

Backgrounds and Overlays

For this fluid layout, the design needed to be flexible enough that exact background positioning was not a requirement. We wanted to retain scale, and also cover the browser window. A fixed-position element is used in this case, width/height: 100%, background-size: cover and background-position: 50% 0px, which works nicely for the main background and additional image-based overlays that are sometimes shown.

The background tree scene becomes increasingly blurry as the user scrolls through the page. CSS-based filters and canvas were options, but it was simpler to apply these as background images with identical scaling and positioning, and overlay them on top of the existing tree image. As the user scrolls through the top half of the page, a “semi-blur” image is gradually made visible by adjusting opacity. For the latter half, the semi-blur is at 100% and a third “full-blur” image is faded in using the same opacity approach.

Where supported, the background also also scales up somewhat as the user scrolls through the page, giving the effect of forward motion toward the trees. It is subtle when masked by the foreground content, but still noticeable.

Here is an example with the content hidden, showing how the background moves during scroll.

Background parallax/blur/zoom demo

Parallax + Scaling

In terms of parallax, a little extra image is needed for the background to be able to move. Thus, the element containing the background images is width: 100% and height: 110%. The background is scaled by the browser to fit the container as previously described, and the additional 10% height is off-screen “parallax buffering” content. This way, the motion is always relative in scale and consistent with the background.

HTML5 Video and “Timelines” in JS

One of the UI videos in this page shows live filters being applied – “Iced Tea”, “Throwback” and so on, and we wanted to have those filters showing outside the video area also if possible. Full-screen video was considered briefly, but wasn’t appropriate for this design. Thus, it was JS to the rescue. By listening to a video’s timeupdate event and watching the currentTime attribute, events could be queued in JS with an associated time, and subsequently fired roughly in sync with effects in the video.

Filter UI demo

In this case, the HTML-based effects were simple CSS opacity transitions triggered by changing className values on a parent element.

When a user leaves a slide, the video can be reset when the scroll animation completes, and any filter / transition-based effects can also be faded out. If the user returns to the slide, the video and effects seamlessly restart from their original position.

HTML5 Video Fallbacks

Some clients treat inline HTML5 video specially, or may lack support for the video formats you provide. Both MP4 (H.264) and WebM are used in this case, but there’s still no guarantee of support. Tablet and mobile devices are unlikely to allow auto-play of video, may show a play arrow-style overlay, or may only play video in full-screen mode. It’s good to keep these factors in mind when developing a multimedia-rich page; many users are on smaller screens – tablets, phones and the like – which need to be given consideration in terms of their features and support.

Some clients also support a poster attribute on the video element, which takes a URL to a static poster frame image. This can sometimes be a good fallback, where a device may have video support but fails to decode or play the provided video assets. Some browsers don’t support the poster attribute, so in those instances you may want to listen for error events thrown from the video element. If it looks like the video can’t be played, you can use this event as a signal to hide the video element with an image of the poster frame URL.

Considerations for Tablets and Smaller Screens

The tl;dr of this section: Start with a simple CSS-only layout, and (carefully) progressively enhance your effects via JS depending on the type of device.

2014 Flickr Signed-Out Homepage
ALL THE SCREENS

Smaller devices don’t have the bandwidth, CPU or GPU of their laptop and desktop counterparts. Additionally, they typically do not fire resize and scroll events with the same rapid interval because they are optimized for touch and inertia-based scrolling. Therefore, it is best to avoid “scroll hijacking” entirely; instead, allow users to swipe or otherwise scroll through the page as they normally would.

Given the points about video support and auto-play not being allowed, the benefits offered by controlled scrolling are largely moot on smaller devices. Users who tap on videos will find that they do play where supported, in line with their experience on other web sites. The iPad with iOS 7 and some Samsung tablets, for example, are capable of playing inline video, but the iPhone will go to a full-screen view and then return to the web page when “done” is tapped.

Without controlled scrolling and regular scroll events being fired, the parallax, blur and zoom effects are also not appropriate to use on smaller screens. Even if scroll events were fired or a timer were used to force regular updates at a similar interval, the effects would be too heavy for most devices to draw at any reasonable frame rate. The images for these effects are also fairly large, contributing to page weight.

Rendering Performance

Much of what helped for this page was covered in the 2013 article, but is worth a re-tread.

  • Do as little DOM “I/O” as possible.

  • Cache DOM attributes that are expensive (cause layout) to read. Possible candidates include offsetWidth, offsetHeight, scrollTop, innerWidth, innerHeight etc.

  • Throttle your function calls, particularly layout-causing work, for listeners attached to window scroll and resize events as appropriate.

  • Use translate3d() for moving elements (i.e., fast parallax), and for promoting selected elements to layers for GPU-accelerated rendering.

It’s helpful to look at measured performance in Chrome’s DevTools “Timeline” / frames view, and the performance pane of IE 11’s “F12 Developer Tools” during development to see if there are any hotspots in your CSS or JS in particular. It can also be helpful to have a quick way to disable JS, to see if there are any expensive bits present just when scrolling natively and without regular events firing. JS aside, browsers still have to do layout, decode, resize and compositing of images for display, for example.

flickr-home-timeline

Chrome DevTools: Initial page load, and scroll-through. There are a few expensive image decode and resize operations, but overall the performance is quite smooth.

Flickr.com SOHP, IE 11 "F12 Developer Tools" Profiling

IE 11 + Windows 8.1, F12 Developer Tools: “UI Responsiveness” panel. Again, largely smooth with a few expensive frames here and there. The teal-coloured frames toward the middle are related to image decoding.

For the record, I found that Safari 7.0.3 on OS X (10.9.2) renders this page incredibly smoothly when scrolling, as seen in the demo videos. I suspect some of the overhead may stem from JS animating scrollTop. If I were to do this again, I might look at using a transition and applying something sneaky like translate3d() to move the whole page, effectively bypassing scrolling entirely. However, that would require eliminating the scrollbar altogether for usability.

What’s Next?

While a good number of Flickr users are on desktop or laptop browsers, tablets and mobile devices are here to stay. With a growing number of users on various forms of portable web browsers, designers and developers will have to work closely together to build pages that are increasingly fluid, responsive and performant across a variety of screens, platforms and device capabilities.

Flickr flamily floto

Did I mention we’re hiring? We have openings in our San Francisco office. Find out more at flickr.com/jobs.

Building Fast Client-side Searches

Yesterday we released a new people selector widget (which we’ve been calling Bo Selecta internally). This widget downloads a list of all of your contacts, in JavaScript, in under 200ms (this is true even for members with 10,000+ contacts). In order to get this level of performance, we had to completely rethink how we send data from the server to the client.

Server Side: Cache Everything

To make this data available quickly from the server, we maintain and update a per-member cache in our database, where we store each member’s contact list in a text blob — this way it’s a single quick DB query to retrieve it. We can format this blob in any way we want: XML, JSON, etc. Whenever a member updates their information, we update the cache for all of their contacts. Since a single member who changes their contact information can require updating the contacts cache for hundreds or even thousands of other members, we rely upon prioritized tasks in our offline queue system.

Testing the Performance of Different Data Formats

Despite the fact that our backend system can deliver the contact list data very quickly, we still don’t want to unnecessarily fetch it for each page load. This means that we need to defer loading until it’s needed, and that we have to be able to request, download, and parse the contact list in the amount of time it takes a member to go from hovering over a text field to typing a name.

With this goal in mind, we started testing various data formats, and recording the average amount of time it took to download and parse each one. We started with Ajax and XML; this proved to be the slowest by far, so much so that the larger test cases wouldn’t even run to completion (the tags used to create the XML structure also added a lot of weight to the filesize). It appeared that using XML was out of the question.

BoSelectaJsonGoodFunTimes: eval() is Slow

DJ Bo Selecta on the decks

Next we tried using Ajax to fetch the list in the JSON format (and having eval() parse it). This was a major improvement, both in terms of filesize across the wire and parse time.

While all of our tests ran to completion (even the 10,000 contacts case), parse time per contact was not the same for each case; it geometrically increased as we increased the number of contacts, up to the point where the 10,000 contact case took over 80 seconds to parse — 400 times slower than our goal of 200ms. It seemed that JavaScript had a problem manipulating and eval()ing very large strings, so this approach wasn’t going to work either.

Contacts File Size (KB) Parse Time (ms) File Size per Contact (KB) Parse Time per Contact (ms)
10,617 1536 81312 0.14 7.66
4,878 681 18842 0.14 3.86
2,979 393 6987 0.13 2.35
1,914 263 3381 0.14 1.77
1,363 177 1837 0.13 1.35
798 109 852 0.14 1.07
644 86 611 0.13 0.95
325 44 252 0.14 0.78
260 36 205 0.14 0.79
165 24 111 0.15 0.67

JSON and Dynamic Script Tags: Fast but Insecure

Working with the theory that large string manipulation was the problem with the last approach, we switched from using Ajax to instead fetching the data using a dynamically generated script tag. This means that the contact data was never treated as string, and was instead executed as soon as it was downloaded, just like any other JavaScript file. The difference in performance was shocking: 89ms to parse 10,000 contacts (a reduction of 3 orders of magnitude), while the smallest case of 172 contacts only took 6ms. The parse time per contact actually decreased the larger the list became. This approach looked perfect, except for one thing: in order for this JSON to be executed, we had to wrap it in a callback method. Since it’s executable code, any website in the world could use the same approach to download a Flickr member’s contact list. This was a deal breaker.

Contacts File Size (KB) Parse Time (ms) File Size per Contact (KB) Parse Time per Contact (ms)
10,709 1105 89 0.10 0.01
4,877 508 41 0.10 0.01
2,979 308 26 0.10 0.01
1,915 197 19 0.10 0.01
1,363 140 15 0.10 0.01
800 83 11 0.10 0.01
644 67 9 0.10 0.01
325 35 8 0.11 0.02
260 27 7 0.10 0.03
172 18 6 0.10 0.03

Going Custom

Custom Ride

Having set the performance bar pretty high with the last approach, we dove into custom data formats. The challenge would be to create a format that we could parse ourselves, using JavaScript’s String and RegExp methods, that would also match the speed of JSON executed natively. This would allow us to use Ajax again, but keep the data restricted to our domain.

Since we had already discovered that some methods of string manipulation didn’t perform well on large strings, we restricted ourselves to a method that we knew to be fast: split(). We used control characters to delimit each contact, and a different control character to delimit the fields within each contact. This allowed us to parse the string into contact objects with one split, then loop through that array and split again on each string.

that.contacts = o.responseText.split("\c");

for (var n = 0, len = that.contacts.length, contactSplit; n < len; n++) {

	contactSplit = that.contacts[n].split("\a");

	that.contacts[n] = {};
	that.contacts[n].n = contactSplit[0];
	that.contacts[n].e = contactSplit[1];
	that.contacts[n].u = contactSplit[2];
	that.contacts[n].r = contactSplit[3];
	that.contacts[n].s = contactSplit[4];
	that.contacts[n].f = contactSplit[5];
	that.contacts[n].a = contactSplit[6];
	that.contacts[n].d = contactSplit[7];
	that.contacts[n].y = contactSplit[8];
}

Though this technique sounds like it would be slow, it actually performed on par with native JSON parsing (it was a little faster for cases containing less than 1000 contacts, and a little slower for those over 1000). It also had the smallest filesize: 80% the size of the JSON data for the same number of contacts. This is the format that we ended up using.

Contacts File Size (KB) Parse Time (ms) File Size per Contact (KB) Parse Time per Contact (ms)
10,741 818 173 0.08 0.02
4,877 375 50 0.08 0.01
2,979 208 34 0.07 0.01
1,916 144 21 0.08 0.01
1,363 93 16 0.07 0.01
800 58 10 0.07 0.01
644 46 8 0.07 0.01
325 24 4 0.07 0.01
260 14 3 0.05 0.01
160 13 3 0.08 0.02

Searching

Ben to the Rescue

Now that we have a giant array of contacts in JavaScript, we needed a way to search through them and select one. For this, we used YUI’s excellent AutoComplete widget. To get the data into the widget, we created a DataSource object that would execute a function to get results. This function simply looped through our contact array and matched the given query against four different properties of each contact, using a regular expression (RegExp objects turned out to be extremely well-suited for this, with the average search time for the 10,000 contacts case coming in under 38ms). After the results were collected, the AutoComplete widget took care of everything else, including caching the results.

There was one optimization we made to our AutoComplete configuration that was particularly effective. Regardless of how much we optimized our search method, we could never get results to return in less than 200ms (even for trivially small numbers of contacts). After a lot of profiling and hair pulling, we found the queryDelay setting. This is set to 200ms by default, and artificially delays every search in order to reduce UI flicker for quick typists. After setting that to 0, we found our search times improved dramatically.

The End Result

Head over to your Contact List page and give it a whirl. We are also using the Bo Selecta with FlickrMail and the Share This widget on each photo page.

YUI Blog: Improving The Flickr Upload Exprience With YUI Uploader

water pipe

Visual analogy of simultaneous file uploading. Also, internet/pipe joke goes here.

As a site which has many nifty JavaScript-driven features, Flickr makes good use of the Yahoo! User Interface library for much of its JavaScript DOM, Event handling and Ajax functionality.

One of the fancier widgets we’ve implemented is a flashy browser-based Web Uploadr which uses the YUI Uploader component (a combination of JavaScript and Flash) which allows for faster batch uploads, progress reporting, a nicer UI and overall improved user experience.

Head over to the YUI Blog and check out how Flickr uses YUI Uploader to provide a faster, shinier upload experience.