Thanks for bringing this to the community's attention. However, it technically wasn't necessary - you could simply have raised a custom moderator flag on that question with the info you've provided (which is basically what I did), and one of the mods would have investigated, likely come to the same conclusion, and taken the appropriate actions. There really isn't a need to directly involve Meta in such cases, and indeed I would argue it's counterproductive as it can trigger witch-hunts and impede moderator rectification actions.
Moderators are busy people and stretched thin, and there are a lot of flags raised every day, and sometimes they don't get time to process all those flags, and sometimes they just miss things because they're fallible human beings. But if you aren't seeing the expected action on your flag within a day or so, or the flag is declined, then it's perfectly correct to escalate things by posting here. At the very least you'll likely get an explanation from the responsible moderator as to why the specific action was taken (or not).
I concur. The fact that the rev 3 edit comment jquery is not javascript
is nonsense, also gives a clue that this is a bad edit. While the question is asked in a jQuery context, it is applicable to JavaScript as a whole - which is why the jquery tag guidance explicitly suggests "consider also adding the JavaScript tag".
I've rolled that edit back. A mod should probably also ping this user John as they are making similar bad edits to multiple other questions - effectively, editing titles and retagging from javascript to jquery without community consensus. I've raised a custom mod flag on one of the questions this user has recently edited, linking back here for context, in case a mod doesn't see this anytime soon.
Edit: it gets worse - the same user has been retagging Angular and React questions too, because apparently those aren't JavaScript either... and this has been going on since at least March 2020.
style.text-align
$
make it somewhat jQueryish?two-words
CSS property becomingtwoWords
JavaScript property pre-dates jQuery.$(this)
to something else. Assuming it causes confusion of course, I don't know either language$.extend
only merges two objects. That's it - nothing jQuery specific about it. NowadaysObject.assign()
is equivalent to that call but it's always been possible. The only other jQuery calls are.is()
which checks if an element matches a selector. At the time it was the most convenient way to do this check but we've had alternatives and a couple of years later.matches()
was semi-officially added but again - it was possible anyway. The final usage of jQuery is.attr()
which gets the value of an attribute..getAttribute()
was already available at the time.CSSStyleDeclaration
object. That is part of the core browser API. There is nothing jQuery related in how the property name would be resolved.