The window.requestIdleCallback() method queues a function
to be called during a browser's idle periods. This enables developers to perform
background and low priority work on the main thread, without impacting
latency-critical events such as animation and input response. Functions are generally
called in first-in-first-out order; however, callbacks which have a timeout
specified may be called out-of-order if necessary in order to run them before the
timeout elapses.
You can call requestIdleCallback() within an idle callback function to
schedule another callback to take place no sooner than the next pass through the event
loop.
Note:
A timeout option is strongly recommended for required work,
as otherwise it's possible multiple seconds will elapse before the callback is fired.
A reference to a function that should be called in the near future, when the event
loop is idle. The callback function is passed an IdleDeadline object
describing the amount of time available and whether or not the callback has been run
because the timeout period expired.
If the number of milliseconds represented by this parameter has elapsed and the callback has not already been called, then a task to execute the callback is queued in the event loop (even if doing so risks causing a negative performance impact). timeout must be a positive value or it is ignored.