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23:55
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Q: Custom Element's connectedCallback can be called more than once?

trusktrThe spec says: However, note that connectedCallback can be called more than once, so any initialization work that is truly one-time will need a guard to prevent it from running twice. What does this mean? Is it saying that connectedCallback can be called more than one time before disconnect...

Haha, well, I don't think those people would be the ones reading the spec anyways.
The spec doesn't guarantee that the disconnectedCallback will be executed before the connectedCallback. So if you rely on this asumption you may experiment son unwanted side effects.
@Supersharp Do you mean the order of calls could be constructor --> connectedCallback --> connectedCallback --> disconnectedCallback, or similar? Does any browser ever do that in practice? If so, in which case? Doesn't seem like a good idea for any browser to do that.
@trusktr yes it's what i see with Chrome (ie when adding some HTML via innerHTML+= of via insertAdjacentHTML).
@Supersharp I'm not able to reproduce that in Chrome. Here's a fiddle showing one connected for every disconnected every time we use innerHTML+=, and one extra connected for the element we added: jsfiddle.net/xf82umas. Do you have a fiddle that shows more than one connectedCallback per disconnectedCallback?
23:55
@trusktr you can see in your example that on Chrome (unlike Firefox) the disconnectedCallback are all called after connectedCallback. That (doesn't) work also with only one element: jsfiddle.net/wg9mfkyc
@Supersharp I see the same behavior in Firefox as I do in Chrome, with my fiddle: for each interval, I see only one extra connected than disconnected, which means it calls disconnectedCallback on every element that was connected, then connectedCallback on all of those again, then one additional connectedCallback for the new element. It's the same in Firefox. As for your example, it works as expected in both browsers, and every connected has one disconnected before the next connected. I don't see the problem you're mentioning.
@Supersharp The only difference I see is that Chrome fires disconnected callbacks after connected callbacks, whereas Firefox seems to do it in opposite order, but nonetheless, for every disconnectedCallback call there is a reciprocal connectedCallback call. Are you looking at the number on the right side of Firefox console that show the duplicate console.log counts?
that's what i said
I don't get it. You said there could be more than one connectedCallback call per disconnectedCallback call, but in my example, and in your example, I don't see that happening in either Firefox or Chrome. What I see is one connectedCallback per every disconnectedCallback.
@Supersharp (continued from see previous comment) In other words, I thought you said there can be cases where we see constructor --> connectedCallback --> connectedCallback --> disconnectedCallback for a given element (as per stackoverflow.com/questions/54874212#comment96560155_5487421‌​2), but your example doesn't demonstrate that, and I see constructor --> connectedCallback --> disconnectedCallback.
Hello Supersharp, let's discuss more here. :)

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