How many JavaScript questions can be answered with "use jQuery"?
Looking at JavaScript questions, all too often the answer seems to be "use jQuery," sometimes in as few words. We can end up with answers which feel more like plugs getting the asker to try jQuery (the Silver Bullet) than a concise solution to their question.
Mind you, jQuery is dope (some might even say "sick" or "dyn-O-MITE!") and as such, "use jQuery" can be an effective solution to 9 out of 10 JavaScript problems.
But I feel strongly that it's not enough —as a web developer— to know jQuery and not understanding the underlying JavaScript.
For example: A project I was on had a nifty widget to configure a webpage, which made use of jQuery. When the search solution was integrated, however, it turned out that somehow the search solution conflicted (rather seriously) with jQuery and broke the widget. When faced with doing without the (expensive) search solution (which had been paid for) or the (free) jQuery library, the decision makers tasked me with refactoring the widget to work without jQuery. Obviously I couldn't have done it had my knowledge not gone "use jQuery."
Bearing all these in mind, at what point is "use jQuery" not an appropriate answer to a JavaScript question?