Be provident, when creating objects. Reuse miscelaneous objects, when possible.
Better said: reuse what you can, but reusing misc objects is easy to start with.
This saves a lot of work for garbage collector and thus affects overall performance of your application. This way you will also save time that would be otherwise lost on creating redundant instances.
These efforts are not always necessary, but, the more intense your app activities are, the more valuable are the following techniques.
Several tips below illustrate this idea on matrices, points, arrays, dictionaries, ...rest, filters, color transforms.
Tip 1: matrices.
// DO: reusing a matrix.
private static const MATRIX:Matrix = new Matrix();
// <...>
var bmp:BitmapData = new BitmapData(width, height, true, 0);
MATRIX.identity();
MATRIX.scale(0.5, 0.5);
bmp.draw(source, MATRIX);
// DON'T
var bmp:BitmapData = new BitmapData(width, height, true, 0);
var matrix:Matrix = new Matrix();
matrix.scale(0.5, 0.5);
bmp.draw(source, matrix);
Tip 2: points.
// DO: reusing a point.
private static const ZERO_POINT:Point = new Point();
// <...>
var thresholdTest:BitmapData = new BitmapData(bmp.width, bmp.height, true, 0);
thresholdTest.threshold(bmp, bmp.rect, ZERO_POINT, ">", 0x10000000, 0xFFFF0000, 0xFF000000);
// DON'T
var thresholdTest:BitmapData = new BitmapData(bmp.width, bmp.height, true, 0);
thresholdTest.threshold(bmp, bmp.rect, new Point(), ">", 0x10000000, 0xFFFF0000, 0xFF000000);
Tip 3: avoid heavily using methods, that create redundant instances for you, unless it's absolutely necessary and convenient. Or at least reduce usage of such methods to single calls during you app session.
localToGlobal()
and globalToLocal()
: try to figure whether you can calculate coordinates by yourself. Otherwise, Point instance is created on each call.
getRect()
and getBounds()
: see if you can structure your display list in a way that you don't need detect complicated displacements. Otherwise, Rectangle instance is created on each call.
...rest:Array
: obviously on each method call this creates an array that is being disposed of on method return. Is this absolutely necessary? May be you can use array created outside of the method and reuse it each time (see next tip)?
Tip 4: when possible, create single Array
or Dictionary
instances when you are only using them as containers for generating some results in a method.
// DO: reuse array that holds results
public function generateMeSomeResults(results:Array):void
{
results.length = 0;
// <...>
// fill results array with what you need
// and reuse this reference next time
}
// DON'T
public function generateMeSomeResults():Array
{
var results:Array = [];
// <...>
return results;
}
Tip 5: don't create new array and new filter object each time you want to change someDisplayObject.filters. This is especially important if you animate filters and they have changes in each frame.
// DO: reuse filters array and filter objects
private static const EMPTY_FILTERS:Array = [];
private static const GLOW:GlowFilter = new GlowFilter(0xFF0000, 1, 12, 12);
private static const HOVER_FILTERS:Array = [GLOW];
private function onRollOver(event:MouseEvent):void
{
// it's Ok to change constant here
// because once filters property is set,
// you are free to change filter object: it will not affect
// filters that were set before.
GLOW.color = 0xFF0000+Math.random()*0xFF00;
this.filters = HOVER_FILTERS;
}
private function onRollOut(event:MouseEvent):void
{
this.filters = EMPTY_FILTERS;
}
// DON'T
private function onRollOver(event:MouseEvent):void
{
this.filters = [new GlowFilter(0xFF0000, 1, 12, 12)];
}
private function onRollOut(event:MouseEvent):void
{
this.filters = [];
}
One more important thing to note: DisplayObject.filters
a getter/setter. When you get DisplayObject.filters
value, you effectively create a new object which is not what you want. Hence, reusing an array of filters is a good idea: you have but one instance all the time.
Tip 6: the same Tip 5 goes for ColorTransform
objects. You don't need a separate ColorTransform
instance for each change of a display object's tint. Once you set DisplayObject.transform.colorTransform = someColorTransform;
, you can change your someColorTransform object freely: it will not affect already applied color transforms.
Like in the case with filters
, this property is a getter/setter. When you get DisplayObject.transform.colorTransform
value, you effectively create a new object which is not what you want. See the test below.
import flash.geom.ColorTransform;
var test1:ColorTransform = transform.colorTransform;
var test2:ColorTransform = transform.colorTransform;
trace(test1 == test2); // always false. this object gets created each time on access.