If a function changes which elements are in a selection, then yes, there will be a new object created.
For example:
var link = $('#myLink'),
span = link.find('span');
link
is a different object to span
. However, the original object is not actually lost. You can go back to it very easily with the end
method, which basically rolls back a manipulation operation.
$('#myLink')
.find('span') // get the span elements
.css('color', '#fff') // modify them
.end() // go back to the original selection
.css('font-size', '24px'); // modify that
So if you had a very large number of chained selection calls that didn't use end
, you could end up with a very large object (because there would be a chain of objects that referenced the object that made them). This would be incredibly awkward design, however, so it's unlikely that you're doing that, while Javascript's garbage collection should generally mean that objects you've finished with don't hang around in memory.
$("div").append("something").bind( "click", fn )
returns the same object while$("div").parent()
returns a new object while$("div").html()
doesn't return a jQuery object at all but stringvar a = $("div").parent()
will create 2 objects and while it looks like nothing is referring to the first object and it will be garbage collected, the second object actually refers to the first object in its.prevObject
property so, in this situation, if you storea
somewhere you will never get rid of the first object even though you are only using the second one.