function myResizeFunction() {
...
}
$(function() {
$(window).resize(myResizeFunction).trigger('resize');
});
This will cause your resize handler to trigger on window resize and on document ready. Of course, you can attach your resize handler outside of the document ready handler if you want .trigger('resize')
to run on page load instead.
UPDATE: Here's another option if you don't want to make use of any other third-party libraries.
This technique adds a specific class to your target element so you have the advantage of controlling the styling through CSS only (and avoiding inline styling).
It also ensures that the class is only added or removed when the actual threshold point is triggered and not on each and every resize. It will fire at one threshold point only: when the height changes from <= 818 to > 819 or vice versa and not multiple times within each region. It's not concerned with any change in width.
function myResizeFunction() {
var $window = $(this),
height = Math.ceil($window.height()),
previousHeight = $window.data('previousHeight');
if (height !== previousHeight) {
if (height < 819)
previousHeight >= 819 && $('.footer').removeClass('hgte819');
else if (!previousHeight || previousHeight < 819)
$('.footer').addClass('hgte819');
$window.data('previousHeight', height);
}
}
$(function() {
$(window).on('resize.optionalNamespace', myResizeFunction).triggerHandler('resize.optionalNamespace');
});
As an example, you might have the following as some of your CSS rules:
.footer {
bottom: auto;
left: auto;
position: static;
}
.footer.hgte819 {
bottom: 3px;
left: 0;
position: absolute;
}
$(window).resize(function(){...})