Generally it's cleaner to use an explicit callback over polling, but the advantages of loading scripts with defer
can make a simple call to setTimeout()
worth it.
<head>
<script defer src=https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/jquery.min.js></script>
<script>
const myApp = () => {
console.log('Page ready:', $('h1').text());
console.log('My app is running.');
};
</script>
<script>
const onReady = () =>
typeof $ === 'function' ? $(myApp) : setTimeout(onReady, 100);
onReady();
</script>
</head>
The typeof
command checks if jQuery is loaded. If not, wait 100 milliseconds and check again. (Note that with setTimeout()
each call to onReady()
is independent so there is no recursive call stack to overflow.)
This polling strategy is not specific to jQuery.
You can use this strategy to wait for any library:
<script>
const onReady = () =>
typeof xLib !== 'undefined' ? myApp() : setTimeout(onReady, 100);
window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', onReady);
</script>
External JS File
Alternatively, you can take advantage of the fact that defer
scripts are guaranteed to be executed in order, but this requires putting your code in a separate file.
Load required libraries before your code:
<head>
<script defer src=https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/jquery.min.js></script>
<script defer src=my-app.js></script>
</head>