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If when answering a question, if the answerer chooses jQuery in the Stack Snippet editor but jQuery is neither tagged on the question nor mentioned in the question text, I'd like to see it show a warning bar at the top or similar warning the answerer that jQuery-only answers to non-jQuery questions are not useful.

Don't prevent it, of course; the answerer may be offering an alternative in addition to a non-jQuery answer, or jQuery may be implied in other ways, but just a warning/reminder would be good.

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    Many Javascript questions imply the use of jQuery implicitly, because many users hardly know the difference.
    – Mr Lister
    Sep 19, 2014 at 10:44
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    @MrLister: But until/unless the OP confirms they're using jQuery, giving them jQuery-only answers is not useful. But we must always defer to the answerer, there are just so many ways that jQuery can be implied in the question that an automated check couldn't catch... :-) Sep 19, 2014 at 10:54
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    The problem is that the question may post code that clearly uses jQuery (starts with $(function(){//... for example), but the question isn't about jquery per-se so it's not tagged with jquery. In that case a jquery answer would be totally appropriate and tagging the question with jquery would not be. Sep 19, 2014 at 13:45
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    @MattBurland: Quite true and a very good point. That's part of why it's important not to get in their way, just to show a reminder. Sep 19, 2014 at 13:48
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    jQuery is such an established framework, that even if the question doesn't use jQuery, it probably makes sense for future people to see an answer that shows how to do it with jQuery (alongside a non-jQuery answer for the original poster). Because the answers aren't just for the original poster, but they're also for other people that come along in the future with similar questions.
    – mason
    Sep 19, 2014 at 13:54
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    +1 -- I'm not a javascript developer, however I used it in a course and I really hated that, when searching about something on SO (which happened pretty frequently given all the WTF moments I had...), all the answers used jQuery while I couldn't use it in my work... most of the time no real explanation was given except for "you could use jQuery like this: ...". Next time you give a jQuery answer to a non-jQuery question, please, add at least a non-jQuery solution and an explanation of what's going on.
    – Bakuriu
    Sep 19, 2014 at 13:55
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    @MrLister If the question uses jQuery (and it is stated in the question), but the tag is missing, one should probably edit the question to add that tag. The warning should have that in it
    – msrd0
    Sep 19, 2014 at 14:18
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    @MattBurland I'm not seeing how a situation could possibly exist where writing an answer using jQuery would acceptably answer the question but it wouldn't be appropriate for the question to have the jquery tag. Sep 19, 2014 at 15:54
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    @AnthonyGrist: In the case where the question is actually about javascript, but the questioner happened to write their example code using jquery. For example, they do something like var elems = $("input") but the question is about how to, say, parse text (the value of those inputs) into a number. It's not a jquery question, it's a question where the OP happens to use jquery. Sep 19, 2014 at 16:09
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    @AnthonyGrist There's a maximum of 5 tags allowed on a question. Perhaps there's just not enough room for a jQuery tag on complicated questions.
    – mason
    Sep 19, 2014 at 16:20
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    If jQuery is chosen in Stack Snippets, but there is no jQuery tag on the question, then you should totally drop jQuery and try something else.
    – rgettman
    Sep 19, 2014 at 16:30
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    So what if i choose knockout or angular instead, and those are not tagged in question? what if i link to an external library that is not tagged in question..? In my opinion if we're going to implement something then it should be general. Don'target...
    – T J
    Sep 21, 2014 at 11:41
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    This is an awesome idea, I'm sick of having to leave comments about this every time Sep 21, 2014 at 20:01
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    @Loktar: Not biased, just dealing with the majority case first. When did you last see an AngularJS-only answer to a non-AngularJS question? A MooTools-only answer to a non-MooTools question? Whereas I see jQuery-only answers to non-jQuery questions every single day. Feel free to request the same for others, I'm just targeting the one I've seen an actual problem with. (In my view, the second one to deal with would be Modernizr answers to non-Modernizr questions, but that's only every several days, not every day.) Sep 22, 2014 at 7:08
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    "We see you're about to post a snippet that does not make use of jQuery. You should totally drop that and try jQuery."
    – BoltClock
    Sep 26, 2014 at 15:25

3 Answers 3

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As a user who only answers JavaScript questions, I don't particularly see this as such a prevalent issue.

Yes, I accept that this happens, but I wouldn't say it happens enough that the situation requires special handling by the system.

In my eyes, the best recourse in this situation is to leave a comment on any answer which provides a jQuery solution to a JavaScript tagged question, and politely explain to them that the question does not include jQuery as a tag. In all the times I've done this, I've seen largely positive responses from the answerer, either to delete their answer, or to update it with a non-jQuery solution as well.

If the case anyone feels so strongly about this, they could also downvote the answer, and if the question explicitly excludes jQuery, voting-to-delete.

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    Agreed. This is what I thought the purpose of voting was for.
    – Loktar
    Sep 21, 2014 at 20:13
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    I don't know how we're having such massively different experiences. I also answer mostly JavaScript questions, and see this every day of the week. Sep 22, 2014 at 7:09
  • @T.J.Crowder: I wish I could explain that, but I can't :(.
    – Matt
    Sep 22, 2014 at 8:05
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I agree wholeheartedly with this suggestion, despite the concerns raised in the comments, because it's a valid warning to a quite real problem on Stack Overflow. The warning should however be worded in such a way that it is open to the possibility that the answerer:

  1. Doesn't actually use jQuery and just selected it automatically
  2. The answerer is providing both a jQuery and a pure JavaScript solution
  3. That the answerer believes the question should have been tagged with the jQuery tag (in which case the answerer should be motivated to edit the question)

Addressing the various concerns that are raised:

Many JavaScript questions imply the use of jQuery implicitly, because many users hardly know the difference.

They know enough to know they are using jQuery, thus getting these questions tagged has to happen either way. A warning like this could actually decrease the number of jQuery questions lacking the jQuery tag.

The problem is that the question may post code that clearly uses jQuery (starts with $(function(){//... for example), but the question isn't about jQuery per-se so it's not tagged with jQuery. In that case a jQuery answer would be totally appropriate and tagging the question with jQuery would not be.

So, this already sounded odd, because the consensus has always seemed to me that all questions using jQuery should be tagged jQuery, except if the jQuery part could be taken out without a second thought. If you're describing that last case however then the answers shouldn't be using jQuery either, because they should be answering the actual question, not taking along any boiler code. If for example the user shows code like the following, asking why the variable txt isn't getting changed

$("button#someId").on("click", function(){ 
 var txt = $("input").val();
 var parts = txt.split(",");
 $.each(parts,function(partValue){
  partValue = "not getting changed";
 });
});

The answer should just ignore the boiler code and show code like

var txt = "a,b,c";
var parts = txt.split(",");
parts[1] = "not changed in txt";
console.log(txt, parts);

To address the core of the problem. And even this case the question should be tagged jQuery, because the user asking the question is perfectly fine with jQuery solutions, even though in this case there are none of course.

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I'll admit, I'm guilty as charged, I've been one of those derelicts that posts jQuery answers to a Javascript questions...

But, like mason pointed out:

jQuery is such an established framework, that even if the question doesn't use jQuery, it probably makes sense for future people to see an answer that shows how to do it with jQuery (alongside a non-jQuery answer for the original poster). Because the answers aren't just for the original poster, but they're also for other people that come along in the future with similar questions.

Perhaps rather than discouraging jQuery answers to JavaScript questions we should be encouraging users who are offering a jQuery answer to post a Vanilla JS translation along with their jQuery answer.

Before you burn me at the stake as a heretic, there is at least one really good reason to do this...

People end up using jQuery as a crutch largely because they don't know how to do the thing in Vanilla JS. Showing them side by side how to do something in both is a great teaching mechanism.

Perhaps the Old Guard of JavaScript could start answering jQuery questions with Vanilla JS as well...

If you're really that into discouraging jQuery, show people how to do stuff without it.

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    Pedantry: I'ts not Vanilla JS, it's Vanilla DOM. The language doesn't change depending on what API you're writing to. Sep 26, 2014 at 16:59
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    @T.J.Crowder I called it Vanilla JS because the linked page is hilarious
    – apaul
    Sep 26, 2014 at 17:00
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    I'm not at all interested in discouraging people from using jQuery. I use it and answer a lot of questions about it. And I have no problem at all with someone adding an adjunct to their main answer (which doesn't use jQuery) showing how you could solve the same problem using jQuery (e.g., for future readers, or even to encourage the OP to check out that nifty library they saw used...). My only desire is to stop people posting jQuery-only answers to non-jQuery questions. They aren't useful to the OP if the OP isn't using jQuery. Sep 26, 2014 at 17:01
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    "I called it Vanilla JS because the linked page is hilarious" Ah, yes, yes it is. :-) Sep 26, 2014 at 17:02
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    @T.J.Crowder I'm not trying to put words in your mouth, I just know that there are a lot of purists out there that get really fired up about this topic. Just trying to offer teaching as an alternative to grumbling.
    – apaul
    Sep 26, 2014 at 17:05
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    Yeah, I've run into a few of those...purists...as well. :-) Sep 26, 2014 at 17:27

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