Just a tiny one today, mostly to write this down somewhere:
As you all know, ECMAScript5 adds forEach to arrays, where you supply a function that gets called for each element in the array. There are lots of benefits to this, not least variable scoping on the index and value variables and a bit less typing, but don't all of those function calls add up to a significant runtime cost?
No, they don't.
I got curious about it (I have a tendency to micro-optimize, which I'm trying to break myself of), so I tested it on the slowest (desktop) browser currently in use: IE6. Specifically, IE6 running in an old Windows 2000 VM I have lying around. I tested the performance of looping through a 100-entry array both with and without calling a function. Without the function call, IE6 looped through the array ~4,500 times in a second (that's 450,000 loop iterations/second). With the function, it managed ~2,000 times a second (200,000 loop iterations/second). So while that's a big relative difference (56% slower!), in real terms it falls into fergedaboudit territory: 2.78 microseconds of overhead. You heard, me, microseconds. That's 0.00278 milliseconds.
Now, I'm not going to say there aren't places where it could matter. I am going to say that they're going to be extraordinarily rare, I'd wager I'll never run into a situation where it makes a difference and nor will you. Whatever else you're doing in the loop body is totally going to wash out the function calls. Really.
Happy coding!