DOM operations, including accessing the DOM, are generally slow. This is usually not a problem until you have to perform many DOM operations and your JavaScript application’s performance starts to suffer. A very quick trick to increase performance is to store DOM elements or their values in local variables if you plan to access them multiple times.
// This is slow, it accesses the DOM element multiple times
document.querySelector('#my-element').classList.add('my-class');
document.querySelector('#my-element').textContent = 'hello';
document.querySelector('#my-element').hidden = false;
// This is faster, it stores the DOM element in a variable
const myElement = document.querySelector('#my-element');
.classList.add('my-class');
myElement.textContent = 'hello';
myElement.hidden = false; myElement
Note that, while this trick may come in handy, it comes with the caveat
that if you later remove the DOM element and you still have it stored in a
variable, the variable should be set to null
to avoid
potential memory leaks.