March 8, 2012
wrapping a function as a jQuery parameter
Question by Joseph the Dreamer
i am buliding an autocomplete for my website when i came across this style of building code:
$(function() {
function log( message ) {
$( "<div/>" ).text( message ).prependTo( "#log" );
$( "#log" ).scrollTop( 0 );
}
$(element).autocomplete(....
//more code
});
i know about closures, “IIFE”s but this one’s a new one for me.
- what’s with the “jQuery-wrapped” code above?
- is there any particular reason i should do that? (scope?)
- optimization-wise, should i even do it that way?
Answer by Starx
-
$(function() { });
is equivalent to$(document).ready(function() {});
and as before it executes once the DOM has been ready. -
Defining a function inside is to tell that, the function is only available once the dom is ready to execute.
-
$(element).autocomplete(....
is simply implementing the plugin to the selector, once the DOM is ready to execute.
Hope its clear now 🙂
$(function() {
or $(document).ready(function() {
does not need the whole page to load, to run as $(window).load(fn)
does.