@Loktar I have but at this point I don't know enough to even identify which super simple starter app is correctly using everything. Do you have a list of examples or a good site I can go read up at?
@Luggage yes but the non-SPA isn't a hard requirement. I'm just going to have a lot of different, non-app related "widgets" on the home page. (imagine a dashboard), but the dashboard opens up to the application
Awesome. Thanks @Loktar! I have to go I stayed 15 minutes past when I need to just to understand this. I think I have a leg to stand on so I can at least ask somewhat sensible questions about this now :P
there are many patterns you could potentially be using in your code related to jquery that could cause major memory leaks, but we can't see any of your code, so... we can't identify any of them.
That's vague. Use the profiler. It can tell you things like # of registered event handlers and you can find out for sure.
I know KO well. Too well. I could help if you have some more specific info but "I don't need KO for this part of the app, can I clear it?" is a dead-end.
jquery does do some... odd things that can cause unexpected memory leaks, but in the end it's still the same old common patterns, jquery just makes it worse in some cases
making one root KO component to put your app in, can actually let you tell KO to 'unmount everything' but.. if you have a REAL memory leak (which you haven't convinced me, yet), then you should still find/fix that.
JS is a garbage collected environment. It will grow in size until it needs ram (or some other events) and then shrink again.
no, re-using someObject within. that keeps someObject in context, as long as the event handler is. Now, imagein if someObject was defined as: someObject = $(".foobar").filter(somefilterfunction).last();
someObject now has a reference to all the foobar elements, not just the last one filtered, so they're all left referenced
without looking at the code, and just looking at the end-result, my guess would be you have a for loop creating click events, and using the i from the for loop in the click callback.
(the callback happens later, so i will always target the last one)
var funcs = [];
for (var i = 0; i < 3; i++) { // let's create 3 functions
funcs[i] = function() { // and store them in funcs
console.log("My value: " + i); // each should log its value.
};
}
for (var j = 0; j < 3; j++) {
funcs[j](); /...