functioncancelTimer(id) { if (useRAF) { return root.cancelAnimationFrame(id) } clearTimeout(id) }
functionleadingEdge(time) { // Reset any `maxWait` timer. lastInvokeTime = time // Start the timer for the trailing edge. timerId = startTimer(timerExpired, wait) // Invoke the leading edge. return leading ? invokeFunc(time) : result }
functionremainingWait(time) { const timeSinceLastCall = time - lastCallTime const timeSinceLastInvoke = time - lastInvokeTime const timeWaiting = wait - timeSinceLastCall
functionshouldInvoke(time) { const timeSinceLastCall = time - lastCallTime const timeSinceLastInvoke = time - lastInvokeTime
// Either this is the first call, activity has stopped and we're at the // trailing edge, the system time has gone backwards and we're treating // it as the trailing edge, or we've hit the `maxWait` limit. return (lastCallTime === undefined || (timeSinceLastCall >= wait) || (timeSinceLastCall < 0) || (maxing && timeSinceLastInvoke >= maxWait)) }
functiontimerExpired() { const time = Date.now() if (shouldInvoke(time)) { return trailingEdge(time) } // Restart the timer. timerId = startTimer(timerExpired, remainingWait(time)) }
functiontrailingEdge(time) { timerId = undefined
// Only invoke if we have `lastArgs` which means `func` has been // debounced at least once. if (trailing && lastArgs) { return invokeFunc(time) } lastArgs = lastThis = undefined return result }
/** * Creates a throttled function that only invokes `func` at most once per * every `wait` milliseconds (or once per browser frame). The throttled function * comes with a `cancel` method to cancel delayed `func` invocations and a * `flush` method to immediately invoke them. Provide `options` to indicate * whether `func` should be invoked on the leading and/or trailing edge of the * `wait` timeout. The `func` is invoked with the last arguments provided to the * throttled function. Subsequent calls to the throttled function return the * result of the last `func` invocation. * * **Note:** If `leading` and `trailing` options are `true`, `func` is * invoked on the trailing edge of the timeout only if the throttled function * is invoked more than once during the `wait` timeout. * * If `wait` is `0` and `leading` is `false`, `func` invocation is deferred * until the next tick, similar to `setTimeout` with a timeout of `0`. * * If `wait` is omitted in an environment with `requestAnimationFrame`, `func` * invocation will be deferred until the next frame is drawn (typically about * 16ms). * * See [David Corbacho's article](https://css-tricks.com/debouncing-throttling-explained-examples/) * for details over the differences between `throttle` and `debounce`. * * @since 0.1.0 * @category Function * @param {Function} func The function to throttle. * @param {number} [wait=0] * The number of milliseconds to throttle invocations to; if omitted, * `requestAnimationFrame` is used (if available). * @param {Object} [options={}] The options object. * @param {boolean} [options.leading=true] * Specify invoking on the leading edge of the timeout. * @param {boolean} [options.trailing=true] * Specify invoking on the trailing edge of the timeout. * @returns {Function} Returns the new throttled function. * @example * * // Avoid excessively updating the position while scrolling. * jQuery(window).on('scroll', throttle(updatePosition, 100)) * * // Invoke `renewToken` when the click event is fired, but not more than once every 5 minutes. * const throttled = throttle(renewToken, 300000, { 'trailing': false }) * jQuery(element).on('click', throttled) * * // Cancel the trailing throttled invocation. * jQuery(window).on('popstate', throttled.cancel) */ functionthrottle(func, wait, options) { let leading = true let trailing = true
if (typeof func !== 'function') { thrownewTypeError('Expected a function') } if (isObject(options)) { leading = 'leading'in options ? !!options.leading : leading trailing = 'trailing'in options ? !!options.trailing : trailing } return debounce(func, wait, { leading, trailing, 'maxWait': wait, }) }