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I have a very big single html page. I am performing data manipulation to that page. I am wondering if there is any best way for Jquery selector. like

$("#id").text("ABC");

Above statement searches for tags in my HTML page, since my HTML is very big. is there any performance tip for that ?

for ex:

Which one is faster ?

$(document).on("click", "#contactsTab", callback);

or

$("#contactsTab").on("click", callback);
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3 Answers 3

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If you're going to re-use $("#id"), I would store it in a variable and then use that. Otherwise, you're searching through the DOM each time for that element.

var $element = $("#id");
$element.text("ABC");
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  • The browser does that, actually. I'm not saying I wouldn't also do it, provided the element is stable, just saying, it probably doesn't make much difference at all. Nov 21, 2013 at 22:02
  • Oh, really? I didn't know that. I watched a video on Pluralsight and the author suggested doing that, especially in loops, so I always try and store them in variables if I use the selector more than once. Good to know though!
    – lhan
    Nov 21, 2013 at 22:04
  • Particularly in loops, you save at least: 1. jQuery parsing the string (although no surprise it's optimized for that), and 2. A call into the DOM layer. It's not at all useless, and I do it by default and recommend it. And in artificial, repeated tests it's dramatically different. But in real-world terms, it's not as big a thing as you'd think. Nov 21, 2013 at 22:08
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Searching by id is the fastest dom search. It might be nominally faster to do:

document.getElementById("id").innerHTML = "ABC";
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An ID selector should have the most optimal of all jQuery selector performances. Ideally you should not have more than one element on the page having that id.

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