One way would be adding the timer id in each instance of your updating objects as an attribute; when the object is removed from your DOM you can also call clearInterval
for that timer. If you cannot change what are the attributes (e.g. the objects are from a library) then you can use a parallel data structure like a Set
to track what are the ones needing to be updated.
Possibly even better is having just one setInterval
call in your code; so in case of need you can also suspend the update for all of them at once (e.g. when there is a modal dialog and you would prefer that objects are not updated in that case)...
let auto_updaters = new Set;
let auto_update = true; // set to false to temporarily suspend updates
setInterval(()=>{
if (auto_udpate) {
for (let x of auto_updaters) {
x.update();
});
}
}, 1000);
function newView() {
...
auto_updaters.add(g);
return g;
}
function removeView(v) {
...
auto_updaters.delete(v);
}
In case you also do not control when those objects are added or removed then the only solution I can think to is to actually have the interval function to scan the DOM for them and call the update.
If the update is frequent it may make sense to do a "full scan" to find the objects only once in a while (e.g. once per second) to avoid spending all your time on scanning or use a MutationObserver
to find out when objects are added or removed.
createGraph
? Where do you create those intervals? How are the intervals associated with the elements you are removing?