I came across this property while reading about JavaScript memory leaks.
I was informed that this property is supported only in Internet Explorer and is responsible for circular reference.
I tried to check and found this property not available in any of the browsers. Can anyone offer any insight on this property and how is it linked to memory leaks?
I came here with the same question, also after reading an article about memory leaks. I was still confused after reading the answers here, so I thought I'd share my findings after some more research.
It can be confusing in JavaScript to know if something like .expandoProperty
is part of the language or somebody being clever with property names.
obj.expandoProperty
in the memory leak article could just as well have been obj.foo
. The point they are trying to get across by using ".expandoProperty" is that the property did not exist as part of the object originally.
var obj = {myProp: ''};
obj.myProp = 'foo'; //myProp is not an expando property
obj.myNewProp = 'bar'; //myNewProp is an expando property
Add to the mix: .expando
is an IE-only property that "sets or retrieves a value indicating whether arbitrary variables can be created within the object." MSDN article
See also generalized discussion of expando properties on StackOverflow here.
Simply put expando property is a property which does not exist originally. In Internet Explorer if you create such a property for a DOM element you may end up with a memory leak. Here is an example:
var div = document.getElementsByTagName('div')[0];
div.someProperty = true; // 'someProperty' is an expando property which may introduce a memory leak in IE
More info can be found in the Understanding and Solving Internet Explorer Leak Patterns
I think you mean the expando Property... with a space, referring to the expando
property of objects. It:
sets or retrieves a value indicating whether arbitrary variables can be created within an object.