I encountered the same problem: There are a bunch of plugins out there that make too many assumptions and cause JavaScript errors on YOUR page, even when you are being a good citizen; these errors have nothing to do with your plugin.
There's no sense trying to handle errors in other plugins -- IMO it is better to be self-contained but resilient to their errors.
In my case, the errors were halting the jquery DOM ready event, and my JavaScript init code wasn't getting executed. The exact form of the error isn't important though -- the solution is just to fire on multiple events.
The solution for me was to have fallbacks in addition to relying on the jQuery DOM ready event:
- I wrapped any code I wanted to fire on the DOM ready event into their own function -- e.g. my_hardened_init_action();
- I added a function, my_hardened_init(), that only runs once. It calls my_hardened_init_action() the first time it is called, and does nothing on subsequent calls.
- I added various methods to call my_hardened_init() in the WordPress footer. In my case, I only needed two. First, trying the usual jQuery DOM init, but falling back to a simple setTimeout(). So if the jQuery DOM init never fires due to broken JavaScript, the timeout will fire shortly after when the page has finished loading.
You could add multiple other fallbacks -- even add the code to the header if needs be. As my_hardened_init() only runs once, you can try as many times as you like to trigger it.
This has worked on a bunch of client sites with a range of other broken plugins.
Hope this helps.
ready
event, my suggestion would be to use your own$(function() {
equivalent so that your callbacks will work