I think you hit it on the head. From my perspective, I think if these
tests were never publicized, then most folks wouldn't even notice the
difference unless you were dealing with pages that had to manipulate
large amounts of selectors.
Rey
Klaus Hartl wrote:
Dan G. Switzer, II schrieb:
* We need a plugin, that enables to speed up the core. It can be used
in web applications, which need a lot of perfomance. It doesn't
matter, if some core functions are not used any more (performance is
the goal). It is important, that the jquery style still remains and
that other jquery plugins will still work (this is very important, I
think).
The problem w/a performance "plug-in" is, who really doesn't what better
performance?
I think some performance gains can be added without really increasing the
size of the core API. I'd rather see the size increase a bit rather
than to
have 2 separate parsing engines.
That's just my opinion though.
-Dan
I have the feeling that the whole speed discussion is somewhat
theoretical, isn't it? I guess in a real life app, e.g. with some normal
selections, you will hardly notice any difference between jQuery,
Prototype, DOMQuery and others.
Am I wrong?
-- Klaus
--
BrightLight Development, LLC.
954-775-1111 (o)
954-600-2726 (c)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.iambright.com