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There is a nasty trick many libraries do that I've taken a distinct liking to, and it looks like prototype is one of these.

Mootools does this, If I am right, and it involves overloading many of the prototypes on the basic classes, monkey patching them.

And likewise, I similarly encountered strange behaviour when mootools and jQuery were present, usually jQuery dying because it was calling some object method which had been somehow overloaded/monkey patched by Mootools.

Also, mysteriously, taking mootools out of the script usage list, resulted in everything running much faster, which I concluded was due to less object pollution.

Now I could be wrong, but I concluded from my experience such libraries just simply don't like to co-exist with each other, and seeing how mootools code seemed to me to degrade speed at which normal things were done, I sucked up and ported all mootools based code to jQuery ( A time consuming deal I assure you ), and the result, was code that was fast and didn't have weird errors that were unexplainable.

I recommend you consider migration as at least One of your options.

One More thing, when writing:

I tend to use this syntax with all my jQuery driven code, for a bit of safe encapsulation in the event somebody breaks '$' somehow.

Runtime Code This waits for document.ready before executing:

 jQuery(function($){ 
      code_with_$_here; 
 });

jQuery Plugins

(function($){ 
    code_with_$_here; 
})(jQuery);

Using these will make it easier for people using any jQuery you happen to write to be able to use it without much of a conflict issue.

This will basically leave them to make sure their code isn't doing anything really magical.

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There is a nasty trick many libraries do that I've taken a distinct liking to, and it looks like prototype is one of these.

Mootools does this, If I am right, and it involves overloading many of the prototypes on the basic classes, monkey patching them.

And likewise, I similarly encountered strange behaviour when mootools and jQuery were present, usually jQuery dying because it was calling some object method which had been somehow overloaded/monkey patched by Mootools.

Also, mysteriously, taking mootools out of the script usage list, resulted in everything running much faster, which I concluded was due to less object pollution.

Now I could be wrong, but I concluded from my experience such libraries just simply don't like to co-exist with each other, and seeing how mootools code seemed to me to degrade speed at which normal things were done, I sucked up and ported all mootools based code to jQuery ( A time consuming deal I assure you ), and the result, was code that was fast and didn't have weird errors that were unexplainable.

I recommend you consider migration as at least One of your options.