Just a note: The bind notation allows you to specify additional data for your even handler function. I am actually used to always use a .bind
George. On Nov 23, 7:47 pm, "Michael Geary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > There is no difference at all. > > $(...).click( fn ) > > is merely a shorthand for: > > $(...).bind( 'click', fn ); > > You can see this in the code that creates .click() and the other shortcut > methods: > > jQuery.each( ("blur,focus,load,resize,scroll,unload,click,dblclick," + > "mousedown,mouseup,mousemove,mouseover,mouseout,change,select," + > "submit,keydown,keypress,keyup,error").split(","), function(i, name){ > > // Handle event binding > jQuery.fn[name] = function(fn){ > return fn ? this.bind(name, fn) : this.trigger(name); > }; > > }); > > -Mike > > > > > From: coughlinsmyalias > > > What is the main difference between using .bind() and > > .click(), when I was reading up, it was mentioning it removes > > event bubbling?- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -