jQuery.fn.each vs. jQuery.fn.quickEach (v97)

Revision 97 of this benchmark created on


Description

The quickEach method will pass a non-unique jQuery instance to the callback meaning that there will be no need to instantiate a fresh jQuery instance on each iteration. Most of the slow-down inherent in jQuery’s native iterator method (each) is the constant need to have access to jQuery’s methods, and so most developers see constructing multiple instances as no issue… A better approach would be quickEach.

Preparation HTML

<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script>
  var a = $('<div/>').append(Array(100).join('<a></a>')).find('a');
  
  jQuery.fn.quickEach = (function() {
   var jq = jQuery([1]);
   return function(c) {
    var i = -1,
        el, len = this.length;
    try {
     while (++i < len && (el = jq[0] = this[i]) && c.call(jq, i, el) !== false);
    } catch (e) {
     delete jq[0];
     throw e;
    }
    delete jq[0];
    return this;
   };
  }());
</script>

Test runner

Ready to run.

Testing in
TestOps/sec
.each()
a.each(function() {
  $(this).hide();
});
ready
.quickEach()
a.quickEach(function() {
  this.hide(); // jQuery object
});
ready
Loop For
var l = a.length;
for (x = 0; x < l; x++) {
  a[x].style.display = 'none';
}
ready

Revisions

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