Ok, there are so many approaches, however, I am only interested in 1, but which approach to use? Dunno...
Basically, here's the dilemma. There will be subsequent calls to jQuery within the body of a page. It will need to know if jQuery has already been defined previously, and if so, don't reload it, but if not, than load jQuery. Now, on top of that I need to not run any jQuery code until jQuery is actually sure to be defined.
Here's what I've been using but it's flawed in the sense that I am getting an error on subsequent calls to this in Google Chrome (states that jQuery is not defined)
Here's my code:
if(!window.jQuery)
{
var script = document.createElement("script");
script.type = "text/javascript";
script.async = false;
script.src = "//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1/jquery.min.js";
var oScripts = document.getElementsByTagName("script");
var s = oScripts[0];
s.parentNode.insertBefore(script, s);
}
function dpmodPollBgColor()
{
jQuery(document).ready(function($){
// Uncaught ReferenceError: jQuery is not defined
$.cssHooks.backgroundColor = {
get: function(elem) {
if (elem.currentStyle)
var bg = elem.currentStyle["backgroundColor"];
else if (window.getComputedStyle)
var bg = document.defaultView.getComputedStyle(elem,
null).getPropertyValue("background-color");
if (bg.search("rgb") == -1)
return bg;
else {
bg = bg.match(/^rgb\((\d+),\s*(\d+),\s*(\d+)\)$/);
function hex(x) {
return ("0" + parseInt(x).toString(16)).slice(-2);
}
return "#" + hex(bg[1]) + hex(bg[2]) + hex(bg[3]);
}
}
}
$(".bar-container").each(function() {
if($(this).children(":first").css("width") != "0px")
{
var hexColor = $(this).children(":first").css("background-color");
var bgColor = shadeColor(hexColor, 50);
$(this).css({"background-color": bgColor});
}
});
});
}
if (document.addEventListener)
window.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", dpmodPollBgColor, false);
else
addLoadEvent(dpmodPollBgColor);
I don't want to use onReadyStateChange
because I don't want it interfering with, what could be, other AJAX calls on that same page.
Basically, I need a method to GUARANTEE that 1. If jQuery is not loaded, it will load it. 2. It will not perform the function that jQuery is inside until jQuery has actually been finished loading. 3. It will not interfere with any other jQuery code on the page, no matter what variable is being defined for jQuery. For example if some other code is defining jQuery as usin
, instead of the default $
.
I find myself having extreme difficulty getting multiple instances of jQuery to work in harmony with each other.
The method I am using now is this:
Use the if statement that defines jQuery if not loaded via the
if(!window.jQuery)
statement.Define a function, and wrap all jQuery inside of this function:
function FunctionName() { jQuery(document).ready(function($){
// All jQuery code in here;
}); }
Attempt to load the function onLoad, using if
window.addEventListener
if possible, otherwise a built-in function calledAddLoadEvent()
There is a flaw in the implementation somehow, but the logic seems right to me. How would I go about getting this working on multiple instances of the same code, with different function names, in Google Chrome? Seems fine in all other browsers, cept Google Chrome.
Thanks
(window.jQuery)
exists.