It's not really good practice, because you do not control which click events get unbound. There are two different approaches to improve this:
Use event namespaces (faster)
You can use a namespace to control you unbind just the click event you're going to bind again:
$(selector).off('click.namespace').on('click.namespace', function(e) { //...
Use classes (fastest)
Use classes added to the link to mark it as registered (this does not unbind previously bound events, but it helps preventing multiple event bindings, which is the issue in most cases you would use off
(unbind) before on
(bind):
$(selector).not('.registered').addClass('registered').on('click', function(e) { //...
You can even turn this into a little sexy plugin, writing:
$.fn.register = function(register_class) {
register_class || (register_class = 'registered'); // lets you control the class
return this.not('.' + register_class).addClass(register_class);
};
Like this, you can just call register
on every selector:
$(selector).register().on('click', function(e) { //...
Or with a specific class, if «registered» is taken:
$(selector).register('special_handler_registered').on('click', function(e) { //...
Performance?
If you wonder about the performance of the different handlers:
Check out this performance test here