28

While putting together a JavaScript example for a question in the snippet editor, I made a programming error that caused the page to become unresponsive. (I think I had an event that just kept firing.) The only option I was given was to close the page. (In Chrome on Mac, if that matters.) Doing so lost about a half hour of work. Is it feasible to put an auto-save, crash detection, or some other mechanism in the editor?

(For now I'm going to use CodePen and paste the results in.)

To clarify, I'm not asking Stack Overflow to solve the halting problem. ;) Say the editor displayed a GUID URL with a suggestion of bookmarking that. Even if it only kept the data for a few hours, this would avoid losses. Alternately Stack Overflow could remember that user X was editing a snippet; when X returned to the site and the snippet wasn't pasted, the site could offer to restore it.

10
  • 12
    'For now I'm going to use CodePen and paste the results in' - do that more often. Dec 23, 2017 at 17:45
  • 3
    Anyway, unresponsive scripts are hardly a problem specific to SO;( Dec 23, 2017 at 17:46
  • 16
    @MartinJames Yes; however I thought part of the idea of snippets was to eliminate the need to use CodePen, JSFiddle, JS Bin, Plunker, etc. to compose a question. If snippets could preserve state then the other tools wouldn't be necessary.
    – TrueWill
    Dec 23, 2017 at 19:31
  • Seriously, there should be a execution time cap (reasonably high to allow for programs containing timers).
    – RyanZim
    Dec 23, 2017 at 21:41
  • 1
    In my experience the editor does auto-saveā€¦ or is that just the answer editor and not the question editor?
    – Dave
    Dec 23, 2017 at 22:20
  • 2
    As for actually handling infinite loops, there aren't many options available in current browsers. Only web workers let the code run without stalling the browser (which also allows things like execution timeouts), and from a web worker you can't interact with the DOM, so it isn't really viable. The only other option I'm aware of is to modify the code before running it to add escape hatches at every branch, which is obviously super complicated.
    – Dave
    Dec 23, 2017 at 22:23
  • 1
    @dave if you compose a snippet, you compose it in a separate editor, and that editor only inserts the snippet into the main body when you press exit & save
    – Ferrybig
    Dec 23, 2017 at 22:36
  • 35
    Feature Request: Solve the Halting Problem, time frame: 6-8 weeks. Dec 24, 2017 at 11:26
  • 7
    Firefox pops up a window saying "This script is unresponsive. Do you want to terminate it?"
    – Maya
    Dec 24, 2017 at 13:10
  • 3
    Why not just auto-save the snippet to localStorage or indexed DB - whenever possible? I suppose the snippet is not going to take up a lot of space in storage. Dec 25, 2017 at 4:23

2 Answers 2

10

Codepen solved this problem (for some definition of solved) by parsing the JavaScript and inserting code into loops to break out of them.

https://codepen.io/quezo/post/improving-infinite-loop-detection

https://blog.codepen.io/2014/12/16/infinite-loop-protection-round-two/

Another solution might be to save the code somewhere (local storage, server) on each click of "run" so that if you come back to the page after killing your frozen tab you get your code back. It might even be nice if SO put up a helpful "You have an unsaved Q or A, click to edit" that would take you back to your Q or A with your edits. JSFiddle has some form of this. Something like "Your fiddle has an unsaved draft".

enter image description here

NOTE: that I just testing SO by clicking "post your answer", starting a snippet, typing for(;;) {} and running it, checking the tab froze, killing the tab, coming back to this question and clicking "post your answer" again and verified that SO just loses the snippet.

also verified that putting an infinite loop into JSFiddle, running, killing the tab, and the coming back gets my infinite loop code back.

1
5

Quoting my comment from 2014, from Stack Snippets Sandbox - Try It Out Here!:

JS Bin does have some protection from infinite loops and bad performance in general: Protecting you from yourself , including an open source loop protection module: GitHub - jsbin/loop-protect .
It's easy to say "halting problem" and give up, but it turns out there is a lot you can do to help your users.

For example, this code:

for(var i=0;i<100000;i++)
{
    console.log(1);
}

Gived the following output on the browser console:

Exiting potential infinite loop at line 1. To disable loop protection: add "// noprotect" to your code

Working example: http://jsbin.com/tihewikuwe/1/edit?js,console

I still think using one of these libraries is a good idea.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .