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Home/ Questions/Q 6903083
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T07:52:52+00:00 2026-05-27T07:52:52+00:00

Assuming I just want to attach a simple click handler to an element, I’ve

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Assuming I just want to attach a simple click handler to an element, I’ve always done this:

$("#mydiv").click(function() { ... });

Looking at the JQuery docs, it seems that .on() is the “recommended” way to attach event handlers and replaces .bind(), .delegate() and .live():

As of jQuery 1.7, the .on() method provides all functionality required
for attaching event handlers. For help in converting from older jQuery
event methods, see .bind(), .delegate(), and .live().

And in the docs for .click() it says:

This method is a shortcut for .bind(‘click’, handler) in the first two variations, and .trigger(‘click’) in the third.

So this implies that .click() is using .bind() which will be deprecated and replaced by .on(), right? Or is the implication that .click() will stick around, but it will at some point become a shortcut for .on("click")?

Basically, my question is this… When writing JQuery code today, should I use:

Variant 1: $("#mydiv").click(function() { ... });

or:

Variant 2: $("#mydiv").on("click", function() { ... });

?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T07:52:53+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 7:52 am

    Personally I would use on() for all event bindings from jQuery 1.7+.

    It means there’s no ambiguity between elements which are added dynamically and those available on page load.

    Also, as you state, click() (and other event shortcuts) are converted to on("event", function() { ... }); by jQuery anyway, so it saves a step in the process – not that this makes a noticeable difference of course.

    And finally, on("click") reads better in my opinion.

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