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Home/ Questions/Q 907161
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T16:30:29+00:00 2026-05-15T16:30:29+00:00

Is it always best practice to use: var $this = $(this); Or is $(this)

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Is it always best practice to use:

var $this = $(this);

Or is $(this) cached and therefore the above line is just for saving two characters?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T16:30:30+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 4:30 pm

    Using $(this) calls at least two (and possibly more than two) functions and allocates an object each and every time you use it (consuming memory that eventually has to be reclaimed). That’s all extra work if you’re just going to reuse the same thing. I’d recommend calling it once and then caching the result (e.g., within the function) rather than having a dozen lines of $(this).foo(); $(this).bar();.

    $ is an alias for the jQuery function, which looks like this:

    var jQuery = function( selector, context ) {
        // The jQuery object is actually just the init constructor 'enhanced'
        return new jQuery.fn.init( selector, context );
    }
    

    As you can see, it creates an object, calling the constructor function jQuery.fn.init. That function then has to figure out what it’s doing, because, jQuery uses the jQuery function for 18 different things. I’m not saying it doesn’t do it quickly, but why do all that extra work. 🙂

    Edit: In the case where you’re passing a DOM element into it (which is usually what $(this) is doing), jQuery.fn.init doesn’t make any further function calls. So “just” two plus the allocation.

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