I know that MutationObservers callbacks may get called sometime after the DOM change. But the question is: What is the timing of these callbacks? Do the callbacks enter the event queue of the browsers? If so, when do they enter the queue?
Are the callbacks:
- called immediately after the DOM mutation take place,
- called as soon as the function that manipulate DOM finishes,
- called as soon as the call stack is empty,
- enqueued immediately after the DOM mutation take place,
- enqueued as soon as the function that manipulate DOM finishes, or
- at some other time?
For example, if the following piece of code is executed (with setZeroTimeout defined here):
var target = document.body;
new MutationObserver(function(mutations) {
console.log('MutationObserver');
}).observe(target, {
attributes: true,
childList: true,
characterData: true
});
// Post message
setZeroTimeout(function () { console.log('message event'); });
// DOM mutation
target.setAttribute("data-test", "value");
Should "MutationObserver" be printed before "message event" or after it? Or is it implementation-defined?
I'm getting "MutationObserver" before "message event" on Chromium 26, though the DOM mutation is after message posting. Maybe this is indicating that MutationObserver callbacks are not using the event queue.
I have googled for HTML specification, DOM specification or browser implementation documents, but I didn't found anything related to this behavior.
Any explanation or documentation on the timing of MutationObservers callbacks please?
I'm going to answer my own question two years later according to the updated DOM spec from WHATWG.
As shown in the spec:
While "Queuing a compound microtask" links to a section in the HTML spec explaining the microtask queue model.
Therefore, we can conclude that
MutationObserver
callbacks are fired as microtasks, which are indeed sooner than the task queue tasks as suggested by the answer of @Scott Miles above.For further understanding of the event loop and processing model, the Event Loop section of the HTML spec would be perfect.
Personally, I'm glad to see that
MutationObserver
s are part of the standard and have a well-documented and consistent timing model. WithMutationObserver
s supported in most modern browsers, I think they are solid for production use now.