In FireFox I have this jQuery at the end of the body:

$(document).ready(function() {
     $.getScript('LiveMapsJavascriptProvider.aspx?type=reference&value=6', init);
});

There are a lot of js files in the head that are needed to be all loaded before this would work. So I put my call in a document.ready event. It doesn't work. IE works fine.

If I put an alert(''); before I call $.getScript it works.

It looks like a problem with the scripts not getting loaded yet?

I thought Document.ready was fired after all the scripts are loaded and ready to go.

Thanks, ian

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Use the "network" tab in Firebug to see whether the aspx file gets loaded. – Pekka Dec 6 '09 at 17:32
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3 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

You don't necessarily need to use jQuery for that.

Simply have an onload function as below:

<body onload="JavascriptFunctionName">

Or you can dynamically attach your function call to the onload event as shown below:

function addEvent(obj, evType, fn){ 
 if (obj.addEventListener){ 
   obj.addEventListener(evType, fn, false); 
   return true; 
 } else if (obj.attachEvent){ 
   var r = obj.attachEvent("on"+evType, fn); 
   return r; 
 } else { 
   return false; 
 } 
}
addEvent(window, 'load', JavascriptFunctionName);

You may embed jQuery functions calls inside the JavascriptFunctionName function.

EDIT:

jQuery is also capable of doing that through the following code. I recommend trying that first, for the sake of avoiding unnecessary redundant code.

$(window).load(function() {
    JavascriptFunctionName();
});
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Because that's what I could provide to help OP. If you find any bug in the implementation of the addEvent function, please let me know. Upvotes/Downvotes should relate to how helpful the answer was, and I believe it was. You are free to go ahead and post a better answer. – Wadih M. Dec 6 '09 at 18:35
OP is evidently using jQuery already for $.getScript. Why in cripes would you recommend rolling another half-baked addEvent implementation when jQuery has this all wrapped up with $(window).load(init)? Binding the event is just the tip of the x-browser-event-ugly-iceberg: stackoverflow.com/questions/1796141/… – Crescent Fresh Dec 6 '09 at 18:38
It's not half-baked, it works perfectly and this is where it gains its value. Nonetheless, I understand the notion of unnecessary redundant code, so I've amended my answer. Thanks. – Wadih M. Dec 6 '09 at 19:07
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document.ready is fired after the DOM is loaded. You may try this:

$(window).load(function() {
    // will execute once all scripts and images are finished loading
});
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Think you meant .load. – Crescent Fresh Dec 6 '09 at 17:37
@Crescent, yes I meant load. Thanks for the remark. – Darin Dimitrov Dec 6 '09 at 17:40
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You can try using something like head.js to specify execution order, while still taking advantage of parallel loading.

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