I wanted to figure out the fastest way to load non-critical CSS so that the impact on initial page drawing is minimal.
TL;DR: Here's the solution I ended up with: https://github.com/filamentgroup/loadCSS/
For async JavaScript file requests, we have the async
attribute to make this easy, but CSS file requests have no similar standard mechanism (at least, none that will still apply the CSS after loading - here are some async CSS loading conditions that do apply when CSS is inapplicable to media: https://gist.github.com/igrigorik/2935269#file-notes-md ).
Seems there are a couple ways to load and apply a CSS file in a non-blocking manner:
- A) Use an ordinary
link
element to reference the stylesheet, and place it at the end of the HTML document, after all the content. (This is what Google recommends here https://developers.google.com/speed/docs/insights/PrioritizeVisibleContent ) - B) Fetch it asynchronously with some inline JavaScript from the
head
of the page, by appending alink
element to page dynamically. (To ensure it's async, I'm setting thelink
's media to a non-applicable media query, then toggling it back after the request goes out).
I suspected B
would initiate the request sooner, since A
would be dependent on the size of the content in the document - parsing it in entireity before kicking off the request.
In this case, sooner would be ideal to reduce impact on our page load process, since there could be minor reflows that are triggered by the styles in the non-critical CSS file (ideally, the critical CSS would have all reflow-triggering styles in it, but that so far, that's been hard to pull off across the breakpoints of a responsive design, and given that the initial inlined CSS should be kept very small to fit into the first round trip from the server).
I made some test pages, and they do seem to confirm that B will load the CSS sooner (B
requests the css file after around 60-70ms
whereas A
usually requests it around 130-200ms
). It's consistently about twice as fast.
- Demo A (static
link
at end of page): http://scottjehl.com/test/loadingcss/fromhtml.html - Demo B (dynamically loaded
link
): http://scottjehl.com/test/loadingcss/fromscript.html
B comes with the additional benefits of qualifying the request based on whatever conditions we care to test too, which is nice.
- Update noted here: https://gist.github.com/scottjehl/87176715419617ae6994#comment-1243423
- Another note: @adactio helpfully pointed out that the approach would be a bit better if the non-critical CSS still loaded for non-JS environments. Wrapping a
link
to that file in anoscript
tag and placing it at the end of the page would be a nice way to address that. - Update: loadCSS has its own home now! https://github.com/filamentgroup/loadCSS/
@simevidas That's my experience too, I tried putting a link at the end of the page but found it made no difference in the RUM data for time to parse the document and
DOMContentLoded
, even if the link was injected by JS. Making it genuinely async brought both those times down by ~0.5s.@adactio I share your concerns about making CSS dependent on JS but, providing the page is usable with the inline CSS, when JS isn't available the extra styles are just another progressive enhancement.
In terms of splitting what CSS is inlined and what is lazy loaded my experience of this comes down to two main factors:
The browser's default behaviour of blocking as CSS loads is very safe and saves us having to think about some complicated things, by doing this we are taking responsibility for the consequences and have a new set of problems to solve.