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With my limited knowledge, I thought both dojo's dojo.ready and jQuery's $(document).ready are tantamount to each other. However, I just ran into an issue with my application where in a function that was being called using dojo.ready was working fine for all browsers except for some versions of IE. I just happened to replace that with $(document).ready and it works across all browsers. I was happy to get it working but was not sure why it worked.

I did some basic search to find the difference between two but didn't find anything significant.

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    jQuery obviously supports more versions of IE. :)
    – powtac
    Feb 29, 2012 at 20:50
  • Thanks powtac, but I was just curious to know how are the two different. Mar 1, 2012 at 0:13
  • Sorry for my ironic answer. I don't know the difference. But jQuery is known to support a lot of browsers, also old IEs...
    – powtac
    Mar 1, 2012 at 10:31
  • Just by curiosity, did you try the domReady plugin in 1.7 ? dojotoolkit.org/reference-guide/dojo/…
    – Philippe
    Mar 1, 2012 at 10:58
  • @Philippe - no, I didn't try that. Just looked at it and looks like a good one to use in such situations. Thanks much.. Mar 1, 2012 at 17:42

2 Answers 2

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Aside from any differences in how they determine if the document is ready. It is worth noting that dojo/ready integrates with other dojo infrastructure such as the parser and AMD loader, so that it can fire after all required widgets have been parsed, modules loaded, etc..

Dojo < 1.7

dojo.ready waits for dojo.require calls and the parser if parseOnLoad is true in your dojoConfig.

Dojo >= 1.7

dojo/ready waits for AMD requires, and additional functions can be queued. I believe requiring dojo/parser will cause it to queue the parsing operation.

dojo/domReady! AMD plugin provides the simple DOMContentLoaded type of functionality equivalent to jQuery(document).ready

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Here are a few tests of ready implementations and the differences across JavaScript abstractions to handle cross-browser issues:

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