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Home/ Questions/Q 528995
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T09:02:42+00:00 2026-05-13T09:02:42+00:00

Let’s make it immediately clear: this is not a question about memory leak! I

  • 0

Let’s make it immediately clear: this is not a question about memory leak!
I have a page which allows the user to enter some data and a JavaScript to handle this data and produce a result.
The JavaScript produces incremental outputs on a DIV, something like this:

(function()
{
   var newdiv = document.createElement("div");
   newdiv.innerHTML = produceAnswer();
   result.appendChild(newdiv);
   if (done) {
      return;
   } else {
      setTimeout(arguments.callee, 0);
   }
})();

Under certain circumstances the computation will produce so much data that IE8 will fail
with this message:

not enough storage when dealing with too much data

The question is:
is there way I can work out how much data is too much data?

as I said there is no bug to solve. It’s a genuine out of memory because the computation
requires to create too many html elements.

My idea would be to run a function before executing the computation to work out ahead if the browser will succeed. But to do so, in a generic way, I think I need to find the memory available to my browser.

Any suggestion is welcome.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T09:02:42+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:02 am

    Javascript (in the browser) is run in a sandbox, which means that it is fenced-off from accessing things that could cause security issues such as local files, system resources etc – so no, you can’t detect memory usage.

    As the other answers state, you can make the task easier for the browser by pausing between implementations or using less resource-intensive code, but every browser has its limits.

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