I will have a large number of objects in javascript whose visual representation on the pagewill be as divs (the divs will appear and hide depending on the mouse position).
To interact with the objects, I am trying to decide between adding <button>
elements (or other elements with onclick attribute) or <div>
s with click listeners.
The advantage of using <div>
s with click listeners is that the callback function (i.e. the click handler function) will have closure on the object corresponding to its visual representation (the parent div). Thus, when I click, it knows which object I am interacting with.
The advantage of using <button>
elements (or other DOM elements with an onclick
attribute) is that the page will have fewer listeners registered. But the disadvantage of using <button>
elements is that its click handler function will not have closure on the object, and thus the only way to refer to the correct object is via some sort of index wherein each object possesses a unique name. An example with only 2 objects (I will have many more in my page):
var arrayOfObjects = [];
var anObj = {
// some info about object
this.indxInArray = arrayOfObjects.push(this);
this.clickFunction = function() {
// insert logic for click listener...
};
var that = this;
this.theButton = $("<button type='button' onclick='arrayOfObjects["that.indxInArray"].clickFunction");
$('anObj').append(that.theButton);
}
var anotherObj = {
// some info about object
this.indxInArray = arrayOfObjects.push(this);
this.clickFunction = function() {
// insert logic for click listener...
};
var that = this;
this.theButton = $("<button type='button' onclick='arrayOfObjects["that.indxInArray"].clickFunction");
$('anotherObj').append(that.theButton);
}
// ... HTML stuff:
<div id='anObj'>
</div>
<div id='anotherObj'>
</div>
The button way seems like a dirty and tedious way of referring to javascript objects in the DOM, but it does save a whole bunch of click listeners.
My question is: does having many registered event listeners slow down performance significantly? Would this performance impact disappear while the parent element holding the registered element is hidden?