14

Hi, I'm slowly making a chrome extension, and I need to parse some data that contains html entities, and I need to decode it. I saw in an answer here that I could use document.createElement for it, so I did this:

htmlDecode: function(input) {
    if(/[<>]/.test(input)) { // To avoid creating tags like <script> :s
        return "Invalid Input";
    }
    var e = document.createElement('div');
    e.innerHTML = input;
    return e.childNodes.length === 0 ? "" : e.childNodes[0].nodeValue;
}

However I'm worried that document.createElement leaves elements behind because this function runs on the background script, so it's not like it gets refreshed often, and it runs around 35000 times every 5 minutes.

So, do elements created by document.createElement get freed, or do they stay? I mean, I do not append them anywhere and they are assiged to a local variable, but I'm not sure.

1
  • 2
    Sure, nothing references the div anymore after the function is ran, so it will be eventually garbage-collected.
    – Bergi
    Mar 10, 2013 at 11:33

1 Answer 1

7

They will be garbage collected. In particular, since you're developing a Chrome extension, V8 tends to recycle temporaries like this very quickly so it shouldn't be much of a concern.

If you are worried about this in general, one common solution is to simply keep a single div around to do the job.

2
  • I guess you are right, I was just wondering if the element created could get stuck somewhere in the document. I wanted to avoid creating a div, however it might be even better because literally, it gets called over 35k times, and maybe creating element after element is worse even if they get collected.
    – Goodwine
    Mar 11, 2013 at 2:20
  • 2
    If you're worried about performance, creating a single div and re-using it would probably be more efficient. I can't say for sure because Chrome might be smart enough to have a div lying around ready for you in the event that it determines you create them often. If you create an element with document.createElement, it won't be appended to the document unless you explicitly do so, so as soon as your function returns here, it has 0 references remaining and since it was function local and not referred elsewhere, V8 will reclaim it immediately, IIRC. Mar 11, 2013 at 21:07

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