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I found the jQuery.com document on Queue/dequeue is too simple to understand. Can somebody help to explain it a little in more detail? I appreciate it.

+5  A: 

It allows you to queue up animations... for example, instead of this

$('#my-element').animate( { opacity: 0.2, width: '100px' }, 2000);

Which fades the element and makes the width 100 px at the same time. Using the queue allows you to stage the animations. So one finishes after the other.

$("#show").click(function () {
    var n = $("div").queue("fx");
    $("span").text("Queue length is: " + n.length);
});

function runIt() {
    $("div").show("slow");
    $("div").animate({left:'+=200'},2000);
    $("div").slideToggle(1000);
    $("div").slideToggle("fast");
    $("div").animate({left:'-=200'},1500);
    $("div").hide("slow");
    $("div").show(1200);
    $("div").slideUp("normal", runIt);
}
runIt();

Example from http://docs.jquery.com/Effects/queue

alex
Can you demonstrate the same code using the JQuery queue?
orandov
This is not correct. When you have multiple 'animate' calls, jQuery puts them in a queue to execute them one by one. Using the queue method, now you can access that queue and manipulate it, if need be.
SolutionYogi
@SolutionYogi - Please edit my answer if you feel it to be incorrect - the answer is CW'd and you have enough rep.
alex
+14  A: 

To understand queue method, you have to understand how jQuery does animation. If you write multiple animate method calls one after the other, jQuery creates an 'internal' queue and adds these method calls to it. Then it runs those animate calls one by one.

Consider following code.

function nonStopAnimation()
{
    //These multiple animate calls are queued to run one after
    //the other by jQuery.
    //This is the reason that nonStopAnimation method will return immeidately
    //after queuing these calls. 
    $('#box').animate({ left: '+=500'}, 4000);
    $('#box').animate({ top: '+=500'}, 4000);
    $('#box').animate({ left: '-=500'}, 4000);

    //By calling the same function at the end of last animation, we can
    //create non stop animation. 
    $('#box').animate({ top: '-=500'}, 4000 , nonStopAnimation);
}

The 'queue'/'dequeue' method gives you control over this 'animation queue'.

By default the animation queue is named 'fx'. I have created a sample page here which has various examples which will illustrate how the queue method could be used.

http://jsbin.com/amunu

Code for above sample page:

$(document).ready(function() {
    $('#nonStopAnimation').click(nonStopAnimation);

    $('#stopAnimationQueue').click(function() {
        //By default all animation for particular 'selector'
        //are queued in queue named 'fx'.
        //By clearning that queue, you can stop the animation.
        $('#box').queue('fx', []);
    });

    $('#addAnimation').click(function() {
        $('#box').queue(function() {
            $(this).animate({ height : '-=25'}, 2000);
            //De-queue our newly queued function so that queues
            //can keep running.
            $(this).dequeue();
        });
    });

    $('#stopAnimation').click(function() {
        $('#box').stop();
    });

    setInterval(function() {
        $('#currentQueueLength').html(
         'Current Animation Queue Length for #box ' + 
          $('#box').queue('fx').length
        );
    }, 2000);
});

function nonStopAnimation()
{
    //These multiple animate calls are queued to run one after
    //the other by jQuery.
    $('#box').animate({ left: '+=500'}, 4000);
    $('#box').animate({ top: '+=500'}, 4000);
    $('#box').animate({ left: '-=500'}, 4000);
    $('#box').animate({ top: '-=500'}, 4000, nonStopAnimation);
}

Now you may ask, why should I bother with this queue? Normally, you wont. But if you have a complicated animation sequence which you want to control, then queue/dequeue methods are your friend.

Also see this interesting conversation on jQuery group about creating a complicated animation sequence.

http://groups.google.com/group/jquery-en/browse_thread/thread/b398ad505a9b0512/f4f3e841eab5f5a2?lnk=gst

Demo of the animation:

http://www.exfer.net/test/jquery/tabslide/

Let me know if you have still have questions.

SolutionYogi
A: 

Is it possible to have animations run in realtime such that the animation function returns only after the animation is completed?

I have a problem with the logic for a complicated menu, where if a menu is sliding up and it receives a mouseover event and tries to slide down, but both events contradict each other and it ends up getting very broken. How do I get around this?

Antony Carthy
Why isn't this its own question?
gnarf
This should be its own question, but you could use `$(this).is(':animated')` in your mouseover event handler to test whether the menu is animating before calling `$(this).slideDown()`.
jasongetsdown
+28  A: 

The uses of jQuery .queue() and .dequeue()

Queues in jQuery are used for animations. You can use them for any purpose you like. They are an array of functions stored on a per element basis, using jQuery.data(). The are First-In-First-Out (FIFO). You can add a function to the queue by calling .queue(), and you remove (by calling) the functions using .dequeue().

To understand the internal jQuery queue functions, reading the source and looking at examples helps me out tremendously. One of the best examples of a queue function I've seen is .delay():

$.fn.delay = function( time, type ) {
  time = jQuery.fx ? jQuery.fx.speeds[time] || time : time;
  type = type || "fx";

  return this.queue( type, function() {
    var elem = this;
    setTimeout(function() {
      jQuery.dequeue( elem, type );
    }, time );
  });
};

The default queue - fx

The default queue in jQuery is fx. The default queue has some special properties that are not shared with other queues.

  1. Auto Start: When calling $(elem).queue(function(){}); the fx queue will automatically dequeue the next function and run it if the queue hasn't started.
  2. 'inprogress' sentinel: Whenever you dequeue() a function from the fx queue, it will unshift() (push into the first location of the array) the string "inprogress" - which flags that the queue is currently being run.
  3. It's the default! The fx queue is used by .animate() and all functions that call it by default.

NOTE: If you are using a custom queue, you must manually .dequeue() the functions, they will not auto start!

Retrieving/Setting the queue

You can retrieve a reference to a jQuery queue by calling .queue() without a function argument. You can use the method if you want to see how many items are in the queue. You can use push, pop, unshift, shift to manipulate the queue in place. You can replace the entire queue by passing an array to the .queue() function.

Quick Examples:

// lets assume $elem is a jQuery object that points to some element we are animating.
var queue = $elem.queue();
// remove the last function from the animation queue.
var lastFunc = queue.pop(); 
// insert it at the beginning:    
queue.unshift(lastFunc);
// replace queue with the first three items in the queue
$elem.queue(queue.slice(0,3)); 

An animation (fx) queue example:

Run example on jsFiddle

$(function() {
    // lets do something with google maps:
    var $map = $("#map_canvas");
    var myLatlng = new google.maps.LatLng(-34.397, 150.644);
    var myOptions = {zoom: 8, center: myLatlng, mapTypeId: google.maps.MapTypeId.ROADMAP};
    var geocoder = new google.maps.Geocoder();
    var map = new google.maps.Map($map[0], myOptions);
    var resized = function() {
        // simple animation callback - let maps know we resized
        google.maps.event.trigger(map, 'resize');
    };

    // wait 2 seconds
    $map.delay(2000);
    // resize the div:
    $map.animate({
        width: 250,
        height: 250,
        marginLeft: 250,
        marginTop:250
    }, resized);
    // geocode something
    $map.queue(function(next) {
        // find stackoverflow's whois address:
      geocoder.geocode({'address': '55 Broadway New York NY 10006'},handleResponse);

      function handleResponse(results, status) {
          if (status == google.maps.GeocoderStatus.OK) {
              var location = results[0].geometry.location;
              map.setZoom(13);
              map.setCenter(location);
              new google.maps.Marker({ map: map, position: location });
          }
          // geocoder result returned, continue with animations:
          next();
      }
    });
    // after we find stack overflow, wait 3 more seconds
    $map.delay(3000);
    // and resize the map again
    $map.animate({
        width: 500,
        height: 500,
        marginLeft:0,
        marginTop: 0
    }, resized);
});

Queueing something like Ajax Calls:

Originally posted here - run jsFiddle demo

  // jQuery on an empty object, we are going to use this as our Queue
  var ajaxQueue = $({});

  $.ajaxQueue = function(ajaxOpts) {
    // hold the original complete function
    var oldComplete = ajaxOpts.complete;

    // queue our ajax request
    ajaxQueue.queue(function(next) {

      // create a complete callback to fire the next event in the queue
      ajaxOpts.complete = function() {
        // fire the original complete if it was there
        if (oldComplete) oldComplete.apply(this, arguments);

        next(); // run the next query in the queue
      };

      // run the query
      $.ajax(ajaxOpts);
    });
  };

// get each item we want to copy
$("#items li").each(function(idx) {

    // queue up an ajax request
    $.ajaxQueue({
        url: '/ajax_html_echo/',
        data: {html : "["+idx+"] "+$(this).html()},
        type: 'POST',
        success: function(data) {
            // Write to #output
            $("#output").append($("<li>", { html: data }));
        }
    });
});

Another custom queue example

Run example on jsFiddle

var theQueue = $({}); // jQuery on an empty object - a perfect queue holder

$.each([1,2,3],function(i, num) {
  // lets add some really simple functions to a queue:
  theQueue.queue('alerts', function(next) { 
    // show something, and if they hit "yes", run the next function.
    if (confirm('index:'+i+' = '+num+'\nRun the next function?')) {
      next();
    }
  }); 
});

// create a button to run the queue:
$("<button>", {
  text: 'Run Queue', 
  click: function() { 
    theQueue.dequeue('alerts'); 
  }
}).appendTo('body');

// create a button to show the length:
$("<button>", {
  text: 'Show Length', 
  click: function() { 
    alert(theQueue.queue('alerts').length); 
  }
}).appendTo('body');
gnarf
+1 - comprehensive!
jasongetsdown
+1 for very good examples!
red-X