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I have some code here. That is working fine in Chrome, but not in IE and Firefox.

$(document).ready(function(){
    $(".thumb").click(function(){
        alert ("Reached here.");
        var cat_id = $(this).attr('id'); // get category id
        alert (cat_id);

    });
});


<a href="#" class="thumb" id = "20" name="df" >
    <img src="images/dry_fruits.png" alt="Title #0" width="75" height="75"/>
</a>

Its even not hitting the alert in Firefox and IE. Can someone please help me to identify the issue.

Any help will be highly appreciated.

Devesh

9
  • 1
    Have you checked that the document.ready have not already fired in these browsers? i.e if($(document).isReady){alert('already ready')}
    – mariusnn
    Oct 6, 2013 at 15:11
  • Are you sure that the $(document).ready() function is firing at all in those browsers? Oct 6, 2013 at 15:13
  • 1) Can you update your question to include a full HTML file? 2) You are including jQuery in your HTML file, right?
    – dja
    Oct 6, 2013 at 15:13
  • 1
    @mariusnn if the dom is already loaded $(document).ready calls the function immediately.
    – Musa
    Oct 6, 2013 at 15:13
  • @Musa - I've had issues - especially when handling dynamically added content - where I've experienced that $(document).ready(..) never triggers (from my reasoning due to pageLoad already being fired)
    – mariusnn
    Oct 6, 2013 at 15:15

2 Answers 2

1

It looks like a bug with jQuery 2.0.2. I fiddled it and IE threw errors on just the $(document).ready().

SCRIPT5: Access is denied. jquery-2.0.2.js, line 1378 character 2
SCRIPT5009: '$' is undefined _display, line 21 character 1

Swapped the jQuery version to 1.9.1 and everything worked fine. http://jsfiddle.net/taneleero/pLRNF/3/

2
  • It should be already fixed because it's working for me with jQuery 2.x (edge).
    – ComFreek
    Oct 6, 2013 at 15:44
  • I noticed that also, but looked odd enough to take a shot at the anwser.
    – Tanel Eero
    Oct 6, 2013 at 16:59
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Keeping everything to be done together in one call to $(document).ready ensures no problems with race-conditions etc in which order the functions added are called.

If one function adds the element to the DOM and another require its presence you might get conflicts and unexpected behavior due to varying calling order...

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