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Does implementing Shadow DOM in my projects will make them faster like virtual DOM that's used by React?

2 Answers 2

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They are different things for different purposes, so comparing performance doesn't make sense.

Virtual DOM

Virtual DOM is about avoiding unnecessary changes to the DOM, which are expensive performance-wise, because changes to the DOM usually cause re-rendering of the page. Virtual DOM also allows to collect several changes to be applied at once, so not every single change causes a re-render, but instead re-rendering only happens once after a set of changes was applied to the DOM.

Shadow DOM

Shadow dom is mostly about encapsulation of the implementation. A single custom element can implement more-or-less complex logic combined with more-or-less complex DOM. An entire web application of arbitrary complexity can be added to a page by an import and <body><my-app></my-app> but also simpler reusable and composable components can be implemented as custom elements where the internal representation is hidden in the shadow DOM like <date-picker></date-picker>.

Style encapsulation Shadow DOM is also about preventing styles being applied accidentally to elements the designer didn't intend to, for example because the CSS or components library you are using changed a selector that now applies to other elements that use the same CSS class names. Styles added to components are scoped to that component and bleeding out or in of styles is prevented.

Shadow DOM and performance

Even though shadow DOM is not about performance in the first place it also has performance implications. Because styles are scoped, the browser can make assumptions about some changes to affect only a limited area of the page (the shadow DOM of a custom element) which can limit re-rendering to the area of such a component, instead of re-rendering the entire page.

This is the reason the >>>, /deep/, and ::shadow CSS combinators, which allowed to apply styles across shadow DOM boundaries, were deprecated and are subject to be removed soon from Chrome (other browsers never had them AFAIK). The mere existence of these combinators prevents the kind of optimization mentioned in the previous paragraph.

Angular2 uses the advantages of both worlds.

It uses unidirectional data flow and runs change detection on the model only. If it detects changes it causes the DOM to be updated by updating bindings and make structural directives like *ngFor, *ngIf, ... update the DOM. Therefore the DOM is only updated when the model actually changed.

Angular2 uses shadow DOM (only with ViewEncapsulation.Native which is currently not the default) to utilize style encapsulation capabilities provided by the browser, or (current default) just emulate style encapsulation by rewriting styles added to components, as a workaround until native shadow DOM and CSS variables (for dynamic global style changes) become widely available.

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  • 12
    ...and DOM is not slow. You are. korynunn.wordpress.com/2013/03/19/the-dom-isnt-slow-you-are Oct 2, 2017 at 15:44
  • some practical answer could have add more meaning.
    – Vinee
    Oct 10, 2020 at 17:05
  • @Code What meaning are you missing? Questions about performance are usually quite pointless in general. If you really need to know, build a benchmark that covers your use case. Oct 10, 2020 at 18:21
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    This is informative; however, it does not answer the question. Is A fast like B? There should be a 'yes' or 'no' somewhere, or a statement from which the answer can be easily inferred or one correcting a faulty premise the question is based on.
    – Emmanuel
    Oct 3, 2021 at 14:40
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    I think what @GünterZöchbauer is trying to explain is it's a bit apples v oranges Will shadow DOM make projects faster? Often yes. Like the virtual DOM in React? No. They do different things. DOM changes can trigger expensive re-rendering. Buffering changes in a virtual DOM and stamping them on the real one all at once helps with that, among other benefits. A Shadow DOM doesn't mask or batch changes from the browser. It encapsulates a branch of tree sorta like a private class. This limits processing scope (hence better performance) and has important security (& logic) advantages
    – Rod
    Aug 15, 2022 at 0:34
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No, Shadow DOM and Virtual DOM are unrelated, although somewhat similarly named:

Virtual DOM: React concept of keeping two copies of the DOM (the original, and the updated) for differential reasons. Before rendering, React diffs the two objects to determine if it should apply an update(s) to the actual DOM tree. This results in boosted performance, as we're only updating the portions of the view that require it, not the entire screen.

Shadow DOM: Part of the Web Components spec as proposed by W3C, which basically allows the encapsulation of smaller DOM elements and CSS styles into a single DOM element:

Example Shadow DOM Element

<my-video width="300" height="150" />

However, <my-video> actually encapsulates the following elements:

<div>
   <input type="button" style="color: blue;">Play
   <input type="button" style="color: red;">Pause
   <source src="myVideo.mp4">
</div>

So by using Shadow DOM, we're able to hide the implementation details of our web element, and only pass along necessary information to the sub-elements (i.e. height, width), which, perhaps confusingly, strongly resembles the ReactJS idiom of passing props to components.

Information provided via:

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  • Do you mean that the performance of Shadow DOM is like DOM but it's just encapsulated?
    – Hmoo_oomH
    Mar 15, 2016 at 15:08
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    @Hmoo_oomH My understanding is that Shadow DOM is more for readability - as we're hiding the implementation details of complex web elements behind a higher-order element (e.g. <video>), but there's no expectation of a performance gain.
    – lux
    Mar 15, 2016 at 15:15
  • Think this would have to be <video-element> or some such hyphenated name
    – rpivovar
    Jun 3, 2021 at 22:27

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