It has apparently sped up 50% with the latest release. The time it takes to perform any of those test cases is not important to me. What is important is the application's perceived speed. I find jQuery to perform quite satisfactorily in that context. In fact, the real world involves great expanses of idleness sporadically interrupted by meaningful work. A few milliseconds here and there don't really matter 99% of the time.
Besides, jQuery's greatest strength is the clean and elegant coding model. I don't think anyone will say speed was the objective of jQuery - other than speed of learning/designing/coding with the framework. On May 21, 9:57 pm, Alexsandro_xpt <bagul...@gmail.com> wrote: > Make this testhttp://dante.dojotoolkit.org/taskspeed/