2024-10-31
3207
#vanilla javascript
Shalitha Suranga
197211
114
Oct 31, 2024 ⋅ 11 min read

Why jQuery 4 is a good reminder to stop using jQuery

Shalitha Suranga Programmer | Author of Neutralino.js | Technical Writer

Recent posts:

the replay march 11

The Replay (3/11/26): Eng knowledge gaps, OpenClaw, and more

Discover what’s new in The Replay, LogRocket’s newsletter for dev and engineering leaders, in the March 11th issue.

Matt MacCormack
Mar 11, 2026 ⋅ 26 sec read
ai training alexandra spalato

Your engineering team’s AI training is probably failing: How to fix it

Buying AI tools isn’t enough. Engineering teams need AI literacy programs to unlock real productivity gains and avoid uneven adoption.

Alexandra Spalato
Mar 11, 2026 ⋅ 4 min read
5 Reasons your AI app fails in production (And how to fix it)

5 reasons your AI app fails in production (and how to fix it)

If your AI app or agent works perfectly in development but falls apart in production, you’re not alone. In a […]

Elijah Asaolu
Mar 10, 2026 ⋅ 8 min read
Speed kills It’s time to retire ESLint and migrate to Oxlint

Speed kills: It’s time to retire ESLint and migrate to Oxlint

Compare ESLint and Oxlint, benchmark real speed gains, and learn when migrating to Oxlint makes sense for modern JavaScript teams.

Amazing Enyichi Agu
Mar 10, 2026 ⋅ 6 min read
View all posts

One Reply to "Why jQuery 4 is a good reminder to stop using jQuery"

  1. This is indeed an interesting post.

    I have to contra with three aspects the post leaves unmentioned, though:
    1. Developer’s time is expensive. A more concise or fluent API that saves development time makes sense even in the modern age.
    2. Looking at the examples, I still find the jQuery API more developer friendly. Like method call chaining, manipulating classes of multiple selected elements with a single call, etc.
    3. Legacy apps.

    I wouldn’t use jQuery in a greenfield JS app, but it has its place in the browser environment.
    However, modern JS apps tend to opt-in for libs like lodash instead of jQuery to polyfill the utility methods it provides.
    Some more backend-heavy apps I’ve used recently opted for Alpine instead of jQuery for DOM manipulation.

    I have worked with multiple legacy apps using jQuery as well as apps in Vue and previously a bit of React, this is just a bit of my experience speaking.

    I actually welcome the new/more-modern jQuery version. Replacing jQuery in legacy apps would be pain, so a refreshed version might be a blessing in certain scenarios.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Would you be interested in joining LogRocket's developer community?

Join LogRocket’s Content Advisory Board. You’ll help inform the type of content we create and get access to exclusive meetups, social accreditation, and swag.

Sign up now