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jQuery Design Patterns

You're reading from   jQuery Design Patterns Write Elegant, Structured and Efficient jQuery

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785888687
Length 246 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Thodoris Greasidis Thodoris Greasidis
Author Profile Icon Thodoris Greasidis
Thodoris Greasidis
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Refresher on jQuery and the Composite Pattern FREE CHAPTER 2. The Observer Pattern 3. The Publish/Subscribe Pattern 4. Divide and Conquer with the Module Pattern 5. The Facade Pattern 6. The Builder and Factory Patterns 7. Asynchronous Control Flow Patterns 8. Mock Object Pattern 9. Client-side Templating 10. Plugin and Widget Development Patterns 11. Optimization Patterns Index

Optimizing common JavaScript code


In this section, we will analyze some performance tips that are not jQuery-specific and can be applied to most JavaScript implementations.

Writing better for loops

When iterating over the items of an array or an array-like collection with a for loop, a simple way to improve the performance of the iteration is to avoid accessing the length property on every loop. This can easily be done by storing the iteration length to a separate variable, declared just before the loop or even along with it, as shown below:

for (var i = 0, len = myArray.length; i < len; i++) { 
    var item = myArray[i]; 
    /*...*/ 
} 

Moreover, if we need to iterate over the items of an array that does not contain falsy values, we can use an even better pattern which is commonly applied for iterating over arrays that contain objects:

var objects = [{ }, { }, { }]; 
for (var i = 0, item; item = objects[i]; i++) { 
    console.log(item); 
}

In this case, instead of relying on the length property...

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