1

I have got a function, inside which are some simple expressions, adding nums, appending doms, etc. Since I only have to call it once, so an anonymous function could do it. But which way should I choose and what's the difference?

1: Shorthand for $(document).ready() {}) I seen this a lot,

$(function(){
    var something;
    ++something;
});

2: Found in jquery plugins. Is it binded to $(document).ready() too?

(function ($) {
    var something;
    ++something;
})(jQuery);

6 Answers 6

6

The second one is not bound to the ready event.

In detail. This:

$(function(){  /* ... */ });

needs a variable $ defined. Usually this variable exists when jQuery is loaded and points to the jQuery function.

Subsequently, when you call the jQuery function with a function argument, jQuery is binding this function argument to the ready event. The above is equivalent to

jQuery(function(){  /* ... */ });

which is in turn a convenience shorthand for

jQuery(document).ready(function(){  /* ... */ });

Your second code snippet

(function ($) { /* ... */ })(jQuery);

does not rely on $ being defined or pointing to jQuery() (this can happen if multiple JS frameworks are loaded in parallel).

To still have the convenience of $ within a certain region of code, it creates a function within which $ is defined and points to jQuery(). However, it is not bound to a DOM event.

But this would be:

(function ($) { 
   $(function(){  /* ... */ });
})(jQuery);

This set-up is used to minimize the conflict between JS frameworks or other pieces of code that rely on $. jQuery plug-in authors use it to write plug-ins that work under many environments.


If you think the combined one is too complicated, jQuery also has a shorthand feature, which avoids variable conflicts and binds to document ready at the same time. But be careful, it only works on jQuery and has some downsides.

jQuery(function($) { /* some code that uses $ */ });

For more details, see these two articles:

  1. Using jQuery with Other Libraries
  2. .ready() @ api.jquery.com (Aliasing the jQuery Namespace)
5
  • And how about jQuery(function($) {/*...*/});? Does it bind a function to document.ready() and solve the $ conflict issue as (function ($) {$(function(){ /*...*/ });})(jQuery); does?
    – OpenGG
    Jan 8, 2012 at 7:19
  • @Rufus: Yes. jQuery(…) and $(…) are the same thing, but to avoid conflict between multiple libraries you can use the former. The main difference is that jQuery(…) does not define a $ variable (i.e. you're bound to use jQuery throughout your code), but function ($) {…}(jQuery) does.
    – Tomalak
    Jan 8, 2012 at 21:15
  • I know that (function($){})(jQuery) will solve the conflict issue, it pass jQuery as a parameter. But jQuery(function($) {/*...*/}); seems better than (function ($) {$(function(){ /* ... */ });})(jQuery);, since they both solve the same issues and the former one is shorter. See this demo: jsfiddle.net/NvbAW
    – OpenGG
    Jan 9, 2012 at 8:14
  • @Rufus: Unless I'm very much mistaken, these two forms are not equivalent. jQuery(function($) {…}) declares an $ argument, but it is never actually being defined in this call. So either jQuery magically passes itself as the first argument and I've never heard of that, or there is an error in your statement.
    – Tomalak
    Jan 9, 2012 at 10:34
  • Yes, they are not equivalent, but the former one is a feature of jQuery: docs.jquery.com/… . It can solve the $ conflict issue in a simplified way, and your code is working in a more generic way.
    – OpenGG
    Jan 9, 2012 at 15:33
3

First

It's just shorthand

Second

You are sandboxing the use of $ to reduce conflicts with other libraries that use the $ shorthand.

$ is just a shortcut for the jQuery variable and is being passed into the inner function of the immediately invoked function...

Example

var outerVar = "something";

(function innerFunc(passedVar) {

    passedVar === "something"; //true

})(outerVar);

innerFunc is executed and passed outerVar as its argument.

7
  • removed the reference to closure, but even the jQuery docs call it a closure...??? Sep 19, 2011 at 16:56
  • 1
    @Raynos Please explain this... " ...it's a best practice to pass jQuery to a self executing function (closure)... " -jQuery docs Sep 19, 2011 at 16:57
  • @Raynos So are you... please explain Sep 19, 2011 at 17:02
  • It is a closure; but so is every function in javascript. I agree that the wording is misleading here though. inner function of the closure doesn't appeal to me.
    – davin
    Sep 19, 2011 at 17:02
  • 2
    Its not really a closure unless the environment is maintained, for which you would need to return a function or object in order to accomplish. Beyond that, its just plain old javascript functional scoping. In this case, its functional scoping. developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Guide/Closures
    – bstakes
    Sep 19, 2011 at 17:35
2

In your first example, the shorthand form is functionally identical to $(document).ready().

The second example is an immediately-invoked anonymous function (Thanks @Raynos for the correction: this is often called a self-invoking function; it is not one). The function is defined and executed in place, taking jQuery as its argument. One advantage of this approach is that variables declared within the function will not "pollute" the global (window) scope (as opposed, for example, to simply running that code outside the function). In your example, something is undefined outside the function.

Since jQuery is brought into the function as the argument $, $ is guaranteed to be jQuery within the body of that function -- even in cases where other libraries are using $ outside the function.

A useful side note: it's sometimes helpful to name "anonymous" functions. The, uh, functionality remains the same, but names can make it much easier to debug complex code.

(function superFunction (foo) { // naming this "superFunction"
    var something = 10;
    do_something_with( foo, something );
})(bar);
6
  • 1
    immediately-invoked. It does not invoke itself so it is not self-invoking. (function foo() { foo(); })() would be self invoking (and also infinitely recursive)
    – Raynos
    Sep 19, 2011 at 16:55
  • The second one gets executed right away, and has nothing to do with document.ready, right?
    – OpenGG
    Sep 19, 2011 at 16:57
  • 1
    @Raynos, I agree that the function isn't invoking itself (obviously), and that the term isn't accurate in that sense, but it is accepted to refer to that structure as such (AFAIK). The name is meant to be understood that the function isn't invoked separately to it's definition, but rather as part of it. In that sense it is invoked in its own defining, and thus named self-invoked.
    – davin
    Sep 19, 2011 at 17:07
  • wouldn't all functions be programmer invoked? ;) Sep 19, 2011 at 17:11
  • Rufus, yes. @Raynos, good point, of course you're right -- it's not really invoking itself. Calling it self-invoking is sloppy, although that form is often referred to as such. I'm correcting the answer.
    – Ken Redler
    Sep 19, 2011 at 17:11
1
  1. No it isn't, it is just a shorthand

  2. No it isn't. This code makes sure that $ is really jQuery and not just another javascript library

1

From http://docs.jquery.com/Plugins/Authoring:

But wait! Where's my awesome dollar sign that I know and love? It's still there, however to make sure that your plugin doesn't collide with other libraries that might use the dollar sign, it's a best practice to pass jQuery to a self executing function (closure) that maps it to the dollar sign so it can't be overwritten by another library in the scope of its execution.

0
0

Just combine the two styles.

jQuery(function($) {
  // uses the real jQuery as $
  // code
});

The first style was used to run some code when the DOM is ready.

The second style is used to ensure $ === jQuery and also to make $ a local variable (reduces lookup time by a tiny fraction)

1
  • Great, I have another issue with another js framework using $, which comes to conflict with jquery. Hope this may do it.
    – OpenGG
    Sep 19, 2011 at 17:00

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