views:

7854

answers:

6

When using jQuery to hookup an event handler, is there any difference between using the click method

$().click(fn)

versus using the bind method

$().bind('click',fn);

Other than bind's optional data parameter.

+5  A: 

There is one difference in that you can bind custom events using the second form that you have. Otherwise, they seem to be synonymous. See: jQuery Event Docs

nickohrn
+32  A: 

For what it's worth, from the jQuery source:

jQuery.each( ("blur,focus,load,resize,scroll,unload,click,dblclick," +
    "mousedown,mouseup,mousemove,mouseover,mouseout,mouseenter,mouseleave," +
    "change,select,submit,keydown,keypress,keyup,error").split(","), function(i, name){

    // Handle event binding
    jQuery.fn[name] = function(fn){
        return fn ? this.bind(name, fn) : this.trigger(name);
    };
});

So no, there's no difference -

$().click(fn)

calls

$().bind('click',fn)
Matthew Maravillas
A: 

readability

Craig
+26  A: 

+1 for Matthew's answer, but I thought I should mention that you can also bind more than one event handler in one go using bind

$('#myDiv').bind('mouseover focus', function() {
    $(this).addClass('focus')
});

which is the much cleaner equivalent to:

var myFunc = function() {
    $(this).addClass('focus');
};
$('#myDiv')
    .mouseover(myFunc)
    .focus(myFunc)
;
nickf
+1 That binding multiple events is news to me and possibly quite useful.
cletus
Yeah, that's great to know.
Matthew Maravillas
A: 

There is the [data] parameter of bind which will occur only at bind-time, once.

You can also specify custom events as the first parameter of bind.

aaron
A: 

If you have Google Chrome, their developer tools have an event listener tool, select the element you want to spy its' event.

You'll find that trying the both ways lead to the same result, so they are equivalent.

Omar Abid