Please note that not all jQuery deprecation notices are recorded in the log. Deprecation notices that occur on public pages (front end) are recorded. Notices from the admin pages (back end) are only recorded if the immediate deprecation notices in the admin bar are turned off. Also keep in mind that under WordPress 5.6 logging of deprecation notices are only logged if logging is specifically enabled by the user.
This means you should still check that things work as expected after you have disabled the plugin, and if you know there have been warnings in the admin pages, you may still need to reach out to the authors of the affected plugin or theme.
Please note that not all jQuery deprecation notices are recorded in the log. Deprecation notices that occur on public pages (front end) are recorded. Notices from the admin pages (back end) are only recorded if the immediate deprecation notices in the admin bar are turned off. Also keep in mind that under WordPress 5.6 logging of deprecation notices are only logged if logging is specifically enabled by the user.
This means you should still check that things work as expected after you have disabled the plugin, and if you know there have been warnings in the admin pages, you may still need to reach out to the authors of the affected plugin or theme.
Right now, you are using a plugin to support some old code in this website’s jQuery JavaScript library. That code is deprecated, meaning it is basically obsolete and is losing the support of your themes and plugins and WordPress itself.
This plugin, called Enable jQuery Migrate Helper, is not a fix. It is a temporary solution to give your plugin and theme authors time to update.

This means you should still check that things work as expected after you have disabled the plugin, and if you know there have been warnings in the admin pages, you may still need to reach out to the authors of the affected plugin or theme.


