April 1st, 2006 by David Hammond
I have finished the DOM and ECMAScript support information for Internet Explorer 7.
There isn’t much to say. As far as I could see, only three things have been changed:
Element.style.maxHeight
is now supported.
Element.style.maxWidth
is now supported.
Element.style.minWidth
is now supported.
It’s surely a disappointment for those who were hoping for more of a move toward the DOM standards. There were also some changes regarding XMLHttpRequest, but that’s proprietary and thus beyond the scope of my tables.
And sadly, this is not an April Fool’s joke. Sorry.
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March 30th, 2006 by David Hammond
I have now finished testing the CSS 2.1 and CSS 3 support in Internet Explorer 7. The results are more significant than the previously reported HTML support improvements. CSS was the primary area of layout engine development in Internet Explorer 7, so this is where most of the layout engine changes reside.
Here are the major changes in Internet Explorer 7 as far as CSS 2.1 and CSS 3 support:
!important
is now properly supported.
- Much better support for selectors, including universal selectors, child selectors, adjacent sibling selectors, CSS 3 indirect adjacent sibling selectors, and all attribute selectors in CSS 2.1 and CSS 3. This is better support than Opera 8.5, although still behind Firefox 1.5 in some areas.
- More correct pseudo-class and pseudo-element grammar implementation.
:first-child
is now supported.
:hover
is now supported for all elements, although not perfectly.
- Backgrounds now correctly include border region.
dotted
border style is now properly supported for one-pixel-wide borders.
bottom
and right
can now be used to stretch the box’s dimensions.
- Some
float
bugs were fixed.
- Box sizes are now properly constrained by the
height
and width
properties.
- Several
margin
bugs have been fixed.
max-height
, max-width
, min-height
, and min-width
are now mostly supported.
overflow
is now correctly supported.
position:fixed
is now supported.
z-index
property now behaves correctly with select
elements.
Here are some things I was disappointed about:
- It still doesn’t support combined class selectors like
p.foo.bar{}
and still has other bugs with class and ID selectors.
:hover
has some bugs that cause the hover state to sometimes remain even after the mouse has moved away.
:before
and :after
still aren’t supported, meaning counters, content
, and quotes
also aren’t supported.
inherit
(one of the fundamental features of CSS) still isn’t supported.
- Borders still aren’t supported for table row groups.
border-spacing
, caption-side
, and empty-cells
still aren’t supported.
- There was a nasty regression regarding the
clear
property that prevents elements from clearing floats under certain conditions.
clip
still isn’t supported.
- There were no improvements to the
display
property, meaning CSS table displays still aren’t supported.
- Some
margin
bugs remain.
outline
still isn’t supported.
- There are still a lot of problems with the
vertical-align
property.
- There were no improvements to the print properties.
- Alternate stylesheets still aren’t supported (a requirement for CSS conformance).
- There is still no option to disable author stylesheets (another requirement for CSS conformance).
- Other than basic selectors, there were no improvements to CSS 3 support. There is still no support for any CSS 3 pseudo-classes or pseudo-elements.
A lot of painful problems were fixed, but Internet Explorer is still miles behind the competition in CSS support. According to the Web Devout tables, Internet Explorer 7’s CSS 2.1 support has risen from 54% to 65%, compared to Firefox 1.5’s 93% and Opera 8.5’s 94%. Due to the added CSS 3 selector support, overall support for CSS 3 changes has risen from 7% to 13%, compared to Firefox 1.5’s 28% and Opera 8.5’s 8%.
The lack of support for inherit
, :before
and :after
pseudo-elements, and table display
values will continue to be thorns in the sides of web developers. Hopefully these problems will be fixed in Internet Explorer 8, which is planned for release within one year of the Internet Explorer 7 release.
I will test DOM support improvements next, although I haven’t heard of any changes in that area.
Edit: As a reminder, Microsoft has previously announced that the latest build of Internet Explorer 7 is layout complete, meaning no significant changes will be made to the webpage layout engine until the final release.
Posted in Browser releases, Browsers, Standards support, Web Devout | 1 Comment »
March 26th, 2006 by David Hammond
Following the announcement that the latest build of Internet Explorer 7 is layout complete, meaning no significant changes will be made to the webpage layout engine until the final release, I have begun testing Internet Explorer 7’s standards support. So far the HTML / XHTML support information is complete, and I will work on the CSS information next.
Here is what was changed in Internet Explorer 7 as far as HTML / XHTML support:
- The
abbr
element is now supported.
- There are some slight improvements to
object
support, including some form of fallback mechanism (see below).
- The
select
, optgroup
, and option
elements have been improved.
Here are some things I was disappointed about:
- The
tabindex
attribute still has worthless support
- Important informational attributes like
cite
, datetime
, and longdesc
still have no interface for the user to access their values.
- The
button
element still uses the element contents even if the value
attribute is provided.
- The implicit form for
label
elements still isn’t supported.
- Alternate stylesheets still aren’t supported.
- The
object
element is still practically unusable for simple things like images, the fallback mechanism doesn’t always seem to work, and sometimes the user is presented with strange messages in the object area instead of the fallback that should be provided in the event of a problem.
- The
q
element still doesn’t show quotation marks, rendering the element nearly useless unless you’re willing to let user agents without CSS support see two pairs of quotation marks.
- The
title
attribute is still supported incorrectly.
- There wasn’t a single improvement to XHTML support (other than a change to the layout mode detection algorithm so that XML declarations don’t throw the browser into quirks mode).
All in all, it’s a disappointing outcome in this area. According to the Web Devout tables, overall HTML / XHTML support hasn’t risen by even one percentage point since Internet Explorer 6, and is still sitting at 80%.
The good news is that CSS was the primary focus of Internet Explorer 7 layout engine development (a decision I very much agree with), and I have seen noteable improvement there, particularly in regard to selectors. So far I have found one regression that prevents floats from being cleared under certain circumstances. More information will be available later.
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March 23rd, 2006 by David Hammond
In response to the many problems the Internet Explorer web browser has caused users and web developers over the last few years, Web Devout published a persuasive article on February 3, 2005 called “Internet Explorer is dangerous”. It was and is the belief of this website that use of Internet Explorer 6 is harmful to the Web, and so this article was designed to convince users to switch to a modern alternative.
On March 20, 2006, the 50,000th unique visitor viewed this article. This is a significant milestone in Web Devout’s promotion of modern web browsers and standards. Several websites have taken advantage of the automatic user redirection system offered for this article. Here is a list of websites that are currently known to use this system:
All of the buzz around Firefox and other alternatives in the last year or so have pressured Microsoft into resuming work on their browser. The more you do to keep the pressure on, the less likely they will abandon development again. The health of the Web relies on progress, which relies on competition. Please do your part to inform others about the shortcomings of their browser and help keep competition alive.
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March 21st, 2006 by David Hammond
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, at the MIX06 conference, announced that the company plans to release a new version of Internet Explorer every 9 to 12 months. Microsoft has repeatedly been criticized for halting development of their web browser after it attained an effective monopoly several years back, thus dramatically slowing the growth of web technology and resulting in much higher costs for web development than would otherwise be required. Due to the growing popularity of alternative web browsers, most notably Mozilla Firefox, followed by Opera and Safari, Microsoft has recently taken a defensive stand and resumed work on their browser. The Internet Explorer development team has claimed a commitment to web standards in upcoming versions, and has already made significant progress fixing some of the most costly bugs for the Internet Explorer 7 release. Most of the new webpage features currently being added are already supported by most alternative browsers, and the upcoming Firefox 2.0 and Opera 9 are expected for release before Internet Explorer 7.
If Microsoft delivers on their promise, we may see the situation for web developers improving significantly in the next few years.
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