Just try to abstract the function that does the updates into a function object that owns the array copy. Initialize it, then have fun calling the updater
So do this: Before the first iteration of the your calculator, copy all element references you're interested in to the array. Then with each calculation run, you only need to access that array.
just one question... since raphael is keeping the elements in an array of its own, why keep a duplicate array? or is it that raphael's version of the array may be sparse with useful elements?
so you're trying to sideload each element into a cache? That explains why everything slows down with increasing element count. Closures with lots of data can get expensive when the element count goes up. Finding the right closure again is an expensive calulation
I can't help you with "I believe". I need either numbers or a pseudo-code description of the getters and setters, closure implementation, and the method you think is faster.
Continuing that thought, as the image shrinks further, the font size will eventually hit the minimum font size. My question is whether or not the image reduction is aborted at that point? If not, then you're still dealing with an unavoidable overlap issue.
Think about it. Even what you're calling the "core problem" is just your attempt to solve another problem. Sometimes, knowing what you're trying to do at a high level can lead to a better solution.
I'm catching up with you.... You've got a bunch of svg labels on a display and you're resizing the display. You're also adjusting the size of the labels inside if it looks like the labels might overlap.