I am interested in finding how the Stack Overflow team came to decide on jQuery as its JavaScript library/toolkit. I am currently working with a development "framework" which supports Dojo natively, but I have a hard time implementing some aspects of our web app, especially UI elements, animations, etc. Since I had a jQuery background before this work, my initial reaction is to disable Dojo and load up jQuery. But I am trying to avoid my personal experience biasing the decision. And since I am sure the Stack Overflow development team did not choose jQuery blindly, I would be very interested in the process behind selecting it. (Sometimes looking at what really smart people choose is not a bad way to make a decision :)

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Pretty sure this question was much, much shorter when I started looking for the podcast... Given what you've written after the first sentence, I feel compelled to redirect you to this classic, wherein lots and lots of folks with varying amounts of intelligence sound off on the eternal question, "Why jQuery?" – Shog9 Sep 29 '11 at 23:01
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closed as off topic by kiamlaluno, Tim Yi Jiang, Shog9 Sep 29 '11 at 22:58

Questions on Meta Stack Overflow are expected to generally relate to the Stack Exchange family of websites and/or community in some way, within the scope defined in the faq.

1 Answer

This was captured in the podcast, way back when...

Atwood: So JQuery is the one Jarrod liked the most and I didn't really have a preference. So that's what we're using.

-- podcast transcript

IOW, if you work with Jarrod Dixon and are starting out from scratch, jQuery is a fine choice. If you're not, then this question doesn't really help you.

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