Both tags have the same meaning, although only one question is tagged with both.
Please merge document.ready into document-ready.
Both tags have the same meaning, although only one question is tagged with both.
Please merge document.ready into document-ready.
Option 3: Merge all into document-ready.
[document-ready]
. Although some of those could very well do without the tag, I just want to point out that$(document).ready()
is a jQuery idiosyncrasy that is not always easy to get (and may bite you sometimes). Keeping a tag around this feature (possibly with a more focused name like[jquery-ready]
) does not look like such a bad thing to me.$(document).ready()
, though. There are loads caused by the fact that people don't know it exists and therefore aren't using it when they need to, but they're not going to use a tag in that case.ready()
. There are also some lower-profiles ones, like this one or that one.document-ready
> "Use this tag for questions about javascript functions that run after the page is loaded." ... pretty all encompassing, as stated... but it does bring in to question whether the appropriate tag would be in regards to 'lifecycles' (for a lack of a better word regarding loading and execution states in concept).jquery-ready
, why can't we also havejquery-on
,jquery-each
,jquery-find
,jquery-closest
, etc. Tags just don't need to be that granular.printf()
(and family) have a mini-language with its string formatting, but I don't know if it necessarily deserves a tag of its own.$(document).ready()
takes exactly one argument: a function to call when the document is ready. I do not think that necessitates a tag; otherwise, you might as well have a bunch of tags for every commonly used jQuery method.printf
once had more than a handful tags, one for each C-function. Now it's only one tag for the whole family: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/251192/c-c-printf-familydomcontentloaded
.