Update
I added a helper function to create the CRCTable instead of having this enormous literal in the code. It could also be used to create the table once and save it in an object or variable and have the crc32 function use that (or as W3C's example, check for the existence and create if necessary). I also updated the jsPerf to compare using a CRCtable with the literal string, literal array, saved window variable and dynamic pointer (the example shown here).
var makeCRCTable = function(){
var c;
var crcTable = [];
for(var n =0; n < 256; n++){
c = n;
for(var k =0; k < 8; k++){
c = ((c&1) ? (0xEDB88320 ^ (c >>> 1)) : (c >>> 1));
}
crcTable[n] = c;
}
return crcTable;
}
var crc32 = function(str) {
var crcTable = window.crcTable || (window.crcTable = makeCRCTable());
var crc = 0 ^ (-1);
for (var i = 0; i < str.length; i++ ) {
crc = (crc >>> 8) ^ crcTable[(crc ^ str.charCodeAt(i)) & 0xFF];
}
return (crc ^ (-1)) >>> 0;
};
Here's a link to the performance difference: http://jsperf.com/js-crc32
Well here's my ameatur shot at this. I figured reading off an array is faster than substringing it.
Warning though, I forwent the use of the Utf8Encode function in these examples to simplify the tests. After all, these are just examples and pretty rough ones at that.