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Home/ Questions/Q 8991425
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T22:43:24+00:00 2026-06-15T22:43:24+00:00

This is the global function that runs on load: $.fn.loadfns = function(specificfns) { $(‘#wrapper’).hide();

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This is the global function that runs on load:

$.fn.loadfns = function(specificfns) {
    $('#wrapper').hide();
    $('#load').fadeIn(400);
    $(window).load( function() {
        $('#load').fadeOut(400, function() {
            $('#wrapper').fadeIn(600, function() {
                specificfns;
            })
        })
    });
};

Problem is, some pages require additional functions to be run after load (like inserting events into glDatePicker), so I’m trying to pass them as parameters for loadfns, like

$.fn.loadfns("alert('I won't be run');");

But nothing happens, it’s not executed. If I do

... rest of function ...
$('#wrapper').fadeIn(600, function() {
    alert(specificfns);
})

It alerts “alert(‘I won’t be run’);” (without brackets) which should work as a function.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T22:43:26+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 10:43 pm

    To pass a function around, you pass a function around, not a string.

    If you want to allow just one extra function (which can, of course, call others):

    $.fn.loadfns = function(extraFunction) {
    $('#wrapper').hide();
    $('#load').fadeIn(400);
    $(window).load( function() {
      $('#load').fadeOut(400, function() {
        $('#wrapper').fadeIn(600, function() {
            if (extraFunction) {
                extraFunction();
            }
        })
      })
    });
    };
    

    Used like this:

    $("....").loadfns(function() {
         alert("Do something");
    });
    

    If you want to allow multiple extra functions, pass in an array:

    $.fn.loadfns = function(extraFunctions) {
    $('#wrapper').hide();
    $('#load').fadeIn(400);
    $(window).load( function() {
      $('#load').fadeOut(400, function() {
        $('#wrapper').fadeIn(600, function() {
            var index;
    
            if (extraFunctions) {
                for (index = 0; index < extraFunctions.length; ++index) {
                    extraFunctions[index]();
                }
            }
        })
      })
    });
    };
    

    (Of course, if you’re in an ES5-enabled environment or using a shim, you might use forEach instead of the for loop.)

    Used like this:

    $("....").loadfns([doSomething, doSomethingElse]);
    
    function doSomething() { /* ... */ }
    function doSomethingElse() { /* ... */ }
    // They don't have to be named, it's just clearer this way than with inline ones
    

    You might consider putting try/catch blocks around the calls to the functions if you want to handle exceptions from them.

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