This is sort of a meta-question. Many snippets of JavaScript I’ve seen here on SO are named with a dollar sign prefix (for example, $id on the second line of the snippet shown in this question). I’m not referring to jQuery or other libraries. I am well aware that this is valid, but it seems awkward to do when not necessary. Why do people name their variables like this? Is it just familiarity with a server-side language like PHP carrying over into their JavaScript code?
I thought perhaps it was to identify a variable as being a jQuery object, for example when you save the result of a selection to a variable in order to eliminate duplicate selections later on, but I haven’t seen any consistent convention.
Syntactically, the dollar sign itself means nothing — to the interpreter, it’s just another character, like
_orq. But a lot of people using jQuery and other similar frameworks will prefix variables that contain a jQuery object with a $ so that they are easily identified, and thus not mixed up with things like integers or strings. You could just as easily adopt the same convention by prefixing such variables withjq_and it would have the same effect.In effect, it is a crude sort of Hungarian notation.