I saw this question in stackoverflow but do not feel that it was answered at all.
Is $(document).ready necessary?
I link all my javascripts at the bottom of the page so in theory they are all running after the document is ready anyways.
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I saw this question in stackoverflow but do not feel that it was answered at all. Is $(document).ready necessary? I link all my javascripts at the bottom of the page so in theory they are all running after the document is ready anyways. |
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noif you've placed all your scripts right before the Additionally, if the script doesn't need to access the DOM, it won't matter where it's loaded beyond possible dependencies on other scripts. For many CMS's, you don't have much choice of where the scripts get loaded, so it's good form for modular code to use the off-topic:As a side note: you should use |
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You can use this instead, it's the same thing I do like the "document ready" since it's very literal what you are doing.
This question might be good. Did you read it? jQuery: Why use document.ready if external JS at bottom of page? |
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I have seen references/blog post across the internet regarding the usage of jquery's |
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No, it isn't necessary provided you know you do not have any deferred stuff happening-- and in most cases you will know if you have developed what you are working on from top to bottom. --It is when you bring in someone else's code, without thoroughly auditing it, that you don't know. So, ask yourself are you using a framework or editor that helps you with the structure? Are you bringing in someone else's code and you haven't bothered to read through each file? Are you prepared to go through the Operating System, Browser, and Browser Version matrix of testing your code? Do you need to squeeze every single ounce of speed from your code? document.ready() makes many of those question become irrelevant. document.ready() was designed to make your life easier. It comes at a small (and I dare say acceptable) performance hit. |
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