Should I care about properly removing all events and HTML elements
like this?
The short answer is No! at least in 99% of the cases, it will not matter in any way because the memory used by one DOM element is trivial compared to the overall memory used by a web page.
However it is always a good practice to release the memory used by disposing unneeded objects, but you cannot say that GC would definitely releases the memory utilized by the elements because garbage collection is entirely up to the browser! In theory GC should only kick in when there are no references to the DOM element, at least that's how Chrome works, but in languages like JavaScript, you don't explicitly tell the run-time you're done with the object, things get messy in JavaScript so quickly: a function might pass the object on to some more functions, the object might get saved away as a member within yet another object, an object might get referenced through the closure etc, so it's completely up to the browser how and what to collect!
In your case removing div1
frees the html document and the element would not render in the view, in fact jQuery's remove
method takes care of removing all the events, expando properties, and child elements attached to the element together with the element itself, however you keep a reference of div1
and div2
in yet another object making both DOM elements Orphan elements! removing SomeClass
instance variable releases all references to the DOM elements making them candidate for garbage collection but here comes the tricky that
variable that causes the DOM element make a reference to the instance of SomeClass
through clusure! This issue is known as Circular Reference
in IE:
JavaScript Objects and DOM elements that store references to one
another cause Internet Explorer’s garbage collector to not reclaim
memory, resulting in memory leaks
You can read more about it here
This particular leak is mostly of historical interest IE<8, but a good example of breaking circular links is to avoid using the variable that
, instead use proxy or delegate to change the event handler's context to some particular context.
ECMA 5th bind method is quit useful changing contexts when in comes to DOM event handlers, here's a simple handler based on your code without using variable closure:
this.$div2.click((function() {
this.someMethod2();
}).bind(this));