I've been reading a lot about loops. I've lerned that the fastest way to do a loop in javascript is when you
var i=10; while(i--){console.log(i);}
this will start at nine end at zero because zero is false. It looks like it's fast because it does seems to only do the one check while also setting at the same time (each browser performs differently, please don't shoot me!)
From all that I have seen though, this isn't always practical (as you are counting down)
As this article states in point 3 http://gamealchemist.wordpress.com/2013/05/01/lets-get-those-javascript-arrays-to-work-fast/; you may be looping through an array and Quote
"Because all CPU caches in the world expect the processing to be ‘straight’"
Also if yo need the number++ in the loop for a calculation like so
for(var importantNumber=0;importantNumber<10;importantNumber++){console.log(importantNumber);}
I think that will check both sides of < on each loop
or
importantNumber=0;
while(importantNumber<10){console.log(importantNumber);importantNumber++;}
I think the above is pretty the same as the first
importantNumber+=1; would improve it
while(importantNumber<10){console.log(importantNumber);importantNumber+=1;}
how about one number that is polar oposite to the other
var i=[0,10];// i[0] is the importantNumber
while(i[1]-=1){console.log(i[0]);i[0]+=1;}
Is there a better, faster, more readable, less goofy way to make looping efficient when forward counting is needed?
It is important I feel when dealing with large loops or many loops in sequence or large arrays and big calculations else this is not an issue in normal situations
for (var i=0; i<arr.length; i++)
is already pretty well optimized by decent js engines.