This will help for sure
From the link given above,
It setups jQuery.ready Callbacks Before jQuery is Loaded
e.g.
Suppose you have jQuery in body like this,
<div id="main">
<script>
$(function(){
$("#main").prepend( "<p>Heyo!</p>" );
});
</script>
</div>
<div>...more HTML...</div>
<script src="/js/jquery.js"></script>
It wont work, since jQuery is being loaded at bottom and you are trying to use it before that.
So, we do this workaround,
<head>
<script>
(function(a){
_ready = {
q: function () {
return r;
}
};
$ = function (f) {
if (typeof f === "function") {
r.push(arguments);
}
return $;
};
jQuery=$.ready=$;
}([]));
</script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="main">
<script>
$(function() {
$( "#main" ).prepend( "<p>Heyo!</p>" );
});
</script>
<div>...more HTML...</div>
</div>
<script src="/js/jquery.js"></script>
<script>
(function( i, s, q, l ) {
for( q = window._ready.q(), l = q.length; i < l; ) {
$.apply( this, s.call( q[ i++ ] ) );
}
window._ready.q = undefined;
}( 0, Array.prototype.slice ));
</script>
<script src="/js/scripts.js"></script>
</body>
What the first script does is emulate jQuery's ready function by storing the argments of any calls to $.ready where the first argument is a function into an array. This array is private to our globally scoped _ready.q
method, which, when called, returns the array.
The second script loops through the array by calling _ready.q()
and then applys the arguments originally passed to our imposter $.ready to the real $.ready.
P.S. its a self invoking function in which an empty array is passed with variable name r
.
Refer this
document.ready
?jQuery.js
. I dont think, its a good practise...its just a workaround.