What exactly does that mean? Well, working with the DOM pre-jQuery was a total nightmare of hoop jumping and remembering strange, backward, twisty-hand ways of moving and manipulating the DOM. Back in 2006, you drop in jQuery, and boom, you're done. But, over the years, I could see my jQuery code was getting lazy (and overly heavy handed).

Working with dates is a nightmare. The library moment.js beautifully and simply removes quite a bit of the pain.

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In JavaScript, the Date object was originally a straight port from the Java (ref), which means getting into a nice format like 2015-09-13 is quite a bit of fudderling. Moment takes the pain away.

Then it also gives us comparisons, formatting options, parsing, loads and loads of awesome stuff. Which explains why it's part of my default stack and appears in all my projects.

Nearly all my handlebar projects have this partial included for instance:

hbs . registerHelper ( 'moment' , function ( date , format ) { return moment ( date ) . format ( format ) ; } ) ;

Except here's the rub, as with my jQuery code, I've gotten a little too generous with moment, and now I'm seeing one of our production projects with the CPU running at 100+% (how?!) most of the time, and dipping inside (via node --prof ), I can see most of the time is spent in moment (doing regexp, parsing, formatting and so on).

There's a bunch of optimisations I can, and am doing, but here's an example I wanted to share.

Refactoring out the laziness

I have a handlebar helper that will try to match the day of two arguments, typically these arguments are timestamps, but it can also be the word "today".

Here's the original source:

hbs . registerHelper ( 'matchDate' , function ( date , match , opts ) { var matchDate = moment ( match === 'today' ? moment ( ) . add ( config . offset , 'hour' ) : match ) ; if ( moment ( date ) . format ( 'YYYY-MM-DD' ) == moment ( matchDate ) . format ( 'YYYY-MM-DD' ) ) { return opts . fn ( this ) ; } } ) ;

Reasonably cruft free, and pretty quick to write. But wait a second...looking at the code carefully, I can now see that in the best case, there's three calls to moment. Worst case: there's four!

Moment is great, but it's too easy (for me) to get lazy. I've re-factored the code, and now it looks like this:

hbs . registerHelper ( 'matchDate' , function ( date , match , opts ) { var matchDate ; if ( match === 'today' ) { matchDate = moment ( ) . add ( config . offset , 'hour' ) ; } else { matchDate = moment ( match ) ; } if ( matchDate . isSame ( date , 'day' ) ) { return opts . fn ( this ) ; } } ) ;

Now just one call to moment (regardless of the path). There's probably an additional constructor call to moment (in the isSame parser), but it's still a lot better. The wider impact was this function (and many others like it) were being called hundreds of times on our main pages, which meant hundreds multiplied upwards many times, and quickly I understand the CPU hog.

TL;DR: know your APIs

This laziness was partly due to being really familiar with the low hanging functions, like format , instead of knowing the API really well and understanding all the ways I could have used the library.

// filed under "duh"