Question

What's the difference between empty() and remove()methods in jQuery, and when we call any of these methods, the objects being created will be destroyed and memory released?

Was it helpful?

Solution

  • empty() will remove all the contents of the selection.
  • remove() will remove the selection and its contents.

Consider:

<div>
    <p><strong>foo</strong></p>
</div>

$('p').empty();  // --> "<div><p></p></div>"

// whereas,
$('p').remove(); // --> "<div></div>"

Both of them remove the DOM objects and should release the memory they take up, yes.

OTHER TIPS

The documentation explains it very well. It also contains examples:

before:

<div class="container">
  <div class="hello">Hello</div>
  <div class="goodbye">Goodbye</div>
</div>

.remove():

$('.hello').remove();

after:

<div class="container">
  <div class="goodbye">Goodbye</div>
</div>

before:

<div class="container">
  <div class="hello">Hello</div>
  <div class="goodbye">Goodbye</div>
</div>

.empty():

$('.hello').empty();

after:

<div class="container">
  <div class="hello"></div>
  <div class="goodbye">Goodbye</div>
</div>

As far as memory is concerned, once an element is removed from the DOM and there are no more references to it the garbage collector will reclaim the memory when it runs.

$("body").empty() -- it' removes the HTML DOM elements inside the body tag -

when you declare $("body").remove() - it remove the entire HTML DOM along with body TAG .

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