Deleting Objects in JavaScript

Steve Harrison picture Steve Harrison · Apr 13, 2009 · Viewed 386.1k times · Source

I'm a bit confused with JavaScript's delete operator. Take the following piece of code:

var obj = {
    helloText: "Hello World!"
};

var foo = obj;

delete obj;

After this piece of code has been executed, obj is null, but foo still refers to an object exactly like obj. I'm guessing this object is the same object that foo pointed to.

This confuses me, because I expected that writing delete obj deleted the object that obj was pointing to in memory—not just the variable obj.

Is this because JavaScript's Garbage Collector is working on a retain/release basis, so that if I didn't have any other variables pointing to the object, it would be removed from memory?

(By the way, my testing was done in Safari 4.)

Answer

Jesse Rusak picture Jesse Rusak · Apr 13, 2009

The delete operator deletes only a reference, never an object itself. If it did delete the object itself, other remaining references would be dangling, like a C++ delete. (And accessing one of them would cause a crash. To make them all turn null would mean having extra work when deleting or extra memory for each object.)

Since Javascript is garbage collected, you don't need to delete objects themselves - they will be removed when there is no way to refer to them anymore.

It can be useful to delete references to an object if you are finished with them, because this gives the garbage collector more information about what is able to be reclaimed. If references remain to a large object, this can cause it to be unreclaimed - even if the rest of your program doesn't actually use that object.