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Mouad K.
Mouad K.

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Do we still need jQuery in 2020?

Last week, Bootstrap launched their latest version (v5 alpha) and one of the new features was that they no longer depend on jQuery, that got me thinking, do we actually need JQuery in 2020?

jQuery is one of the most popular libraries in the world, so popular that it’s used by 75.9% of all the websites. In this article we’ll talk about how it became so widely used, and if it’s still worth learning in 2020.

Why is jQuery so popular?

JQuery was created in 2006, back when Internet Explorer was the most used browser and the web was totally different place than it is now. It solved a lot of problems for front-end developers back then; it provided a simple and clear API to build websites with ease. For example:

  • DOM manipulation: Using CSS selectors and some functions you can traverse and manipulate the DOM so easily compared to the vanilla Javascript approach.
  • Animations: JQuery provides some easy to use out-of-the-box functions for animating DOM elements, without needing to get messy with CSS.
  • AJAX: Making AJAX requests without jQuery was a hassle, but with JQuery you can do it in a couple of lines.
  • Cross-browser compatibility: JQuery provides an API that can work on most browsers, something that's very hard to achieve if you're using javascript, this saved developers a lot of problems.

Is it still worth learning in 2020?

The short answer is no, here's why:

Better alternatives:

Javascript has matured so much during these last years, it supports a lot of new APIs and its community has built so many great libraries to fill any void jQuery might leave. "You might not need JQuery" is a website that states alternatives for (almost) every JQuery feature, for example, let's say you want to add a class to a certain element:

// Solution in jQuery
$(el).addClass("className");
// What you need to do in pure JS:
el.classList.add("className");
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So as you can see, jQuery is more replaceable than we used to believe, especially with the emergence of front-end frameworks like React and Vue.

PS: Mixing two frameworks like React and JQuery is a very bad idea.

Size matters

Amazon famously found that every 100ms of delay in the load time of amazon.com cost them 1% in sales.
So loading an 80KB JQuery is a big problem, a problem we can avoid if we can find lighter alternatives.

Conclusion:

To summarize, I think the web right now is passed JQuery, we have better, and lighter tools at our disposal. But as a web developer, it's sometimes still required to use JQuery because as I've mentioned before, it's widely used, so you might run into situations where you have to use it, in such a case, you can just refer to their documentation and you won't have a problem because you'll be so well versed in javascript by that point.

Top comments (40)

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____marcell profile image
Marcell Cruz

Good article, I think it still a good idea to learn jquery, you gonna have to deal with it sooner or later, so it makes sense to at least have a little bit of knowledge about it, but I agree that there isn't must use for it and we have better alternatives.

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perpetual_education profile image
perpetual . education

When we teach JavaScript, we build a little jQuery clone - so, that they'll understand the idea and reasons it was created - and then can easily use it on legacy projects.

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mouadkh9 profile image
Mouad K.

That's some very good practice, two birds one stone!

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mouadkh9 profile image
Mouad K.

True, you will run into it eventually, that's why I appreciate their documentation, it's really clear and straightforward.

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rokobuljan profile image
Roko C. Buljan

You might not need to. The image you pointed is not that relevant any more.
IE9 market share is 0.6% IE11 is 1.3% you're speaking about dead browsers whose use is mostly recorded by developers testing and still supporting those.

Therefore we can calmly finally call it a decade and build for modern browsers. And since NodeList has the prototype forEach...

document.querySelectorAll(selector).forEach(el => {

});
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Or use function instead of the => Arrow Function syntax to support IE11

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jessren profile image
JessRen

Yeeees. Thanks for highlighting. That thesaurus is clunky.

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giorgosk profile image
Giorgos Kontopoulos πŸ‘€

There is a lot of sites and even older CMSs that use it or depend on it for frontend stuff. So it will continue to be implemented or at least need to know how to deal with it so knowledge of it is not wasted but perhaps a new project with newer frameworks probably does not have any need for it.

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mouadkh9 profile image
Mouad K.

Yes, it will always come in handy but a common mistake ( Did it too πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈ) is learning it before learning the same things in JS.

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vishesh profile image
Vishesh

Totally right. But few legacy applications still use jquery. Also WordPress uses JQuery a lot. Myself was working in WordPress few months back and used jquery.

It's also used for small animations in static sites. But recent css and js tweaks are lowering this probability also.

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mouadkh9 profile image
Mouad K.

Yes, unfortunately, but WordPress without jQuery would be a mess! So let's stick with JQuery there πŸ˜‚

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dumdum profile image
dum dum

jQuery is still useful when you develop web app using Django for simplicity.
Because React + Django would add more complexity and remove advantages from built in Django features in Django Templating.

It's my personal opinion.

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mouadkh9 profile image
Mouad K.

That's true for most templating frameworks ( Blade for laravel for example ), but currently, you can ditch jQuery for vanilla JS.

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webdeasy profile image
webdeasy.de

Nice article! I love jQuery but I see it the same way. :)

I wrote an article on my blog about how to move from jQuery to pure JavaScript and about other advantages like speed performance for SEO, a practical example and a list of 1:1 translations.

If you're interested, check it out: webdeasy.de/en/jquery-to-javascript/

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jwp profile image
John Peters • Edited

The odd thing about JQuery, is that in 2020 it's still used more than Angular and React. However, as the article mentioned, it's days are numbered. Just think, in the next epidemic they'll be looking for JQuery people instead of COBOL programmers.

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alphavader profile image
KB

I've made alot of money for having the legacy skills like jquery or even dojo. There alot of clients, mostly banks running on that stack..

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mouadkh9 profile image
Mouad K.

Good point, but you can make a lot of money working for clients using the newest stacks. And why not even both?

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alphavader profile image
KB

Sure.. I love the newest stuff more

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pris_stratton profile image
pris stratton

Nice article πŸ˜ƒ

I wonder if a similar fate awaits d3.js? Are there any alternatives or does it still own that niche.

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dendihandian profile image
Dendi Handian • Edited

I still can't find the alternative that could surpass d3.js network/graph UI ...

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mouadkh9 profile image
Mouad K.

I really don't know since I don't use d3.js much, but I think it will lead that field for years, it seems like it at least.

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agrogers profile image
Andrew Rogers

Hi. I don't understand the 'jquery file size is too big' argument. It's only 80k and may already be cached. Pretty much every site will have some images on and just a couple of them are likely to be bigger than 80k. The front page of amazon might have 100 images on it. Is this just an old argument that is not really relevant anymore?