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Today i was going through some posts in stackoverflow and this reply just popped up. https://stackoverflow.com/a/2280350/548591

https://stackoverflow.com/a/11513602/548591

var name = [];
var name = new Array();

Is the literal one better in terms of performance than initializing an new Array Object.

Was reading this article now, just wanted to update.

http://yuiblog.com/blog/2006/11/13/javascript-we-hardly-new-ya/

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3 Answers 3

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From working on my own direct implementation of ECMA Grammar to make a parser, I can tell you this:

The Array literal [] gets parsed directly and then converted into an array object, whereas new Array() gets parsed first as a "expression", then checked for the new keyword, then what you want to create (in this case Array) and is then evaluated.

I can't tell you exactly how much performance is lost by using new Array(), it varies by the Javascript engine. V8 (Chrome) for example, pre-compiles code to optimize it, so it might get converted into a literal [] anyway, depending on how it works.

The easiest way would be to make a test function that creates a few hundred thousand arrays and measures the time for the loop with the literal declaration or the constructor initialization respectively.

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Yeah, according to the tests, initialising [] is much faster than using the new Array. Besides that, the literal version si much more readable.
And this has already been asked!

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Depending on the browsers, Literals appear to be up to twice as fast. That is, in browsers where there's a significant difference.

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