<iron-pages>
with lazy-loading functionality.
Big applications have a lot of pages. On first load, loading all page elements is undesirable. Most of the pages are unused for the current user. To solve these performance issues, lazy-loading provides an easy-to-use solution.
Lazy-loading means that all elements of your page are loaded when the user
opens the respective page. E.g. when your user visits domain.com/about
, all
elements on the about page are fetched and loaded.
Example:
<iron-lazy-pages attr-for-selected="data-route" selected="{{route}}">
<x-foo data-route="foo" data-path="demo/x-foo.html"></x-foo>
<x-bar data-route="bar" data-path="demo/x-bar.html"></x-bar>
<section data-route="baz">
Inline element baz.
</section>
</iron-lazy-pages>
In the above example, whenever the user routes to domain.com/foo
, the elements defined
in foo/foo.html
are fetched from the server and loaded by Polymer.
Consequently whenever the selected value changes from foo
to bar
, the page foo
will be hidden.
Fetching is only performed once, e.g. switching from foo
to bar
to foo
will fetch
foo
once and show foo
twice.
You can also add <dom-if>
as a route to enable restamping:
<iron-lazy-pages
attr-for-selected="data-route"
selected="{{route}}"
loading="{{loading}}"
hide-immediately>
<template is="dom-if" data-route="foo" restamp>
Leaving this tab and coming back will loose input value due to restamp<br/>
<input type="text"/>
</template>
<template is="dom-if" data-route="bar">
Leaving this tab and coming back will keep input value<br/>
<input type="text"/>
</template>
</iron-lazy-pages>