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:
- Using jQuery with Other Libraries
- .ready() @ api.jquery.com (Aliasing the jQuery Namespace)