As if modern websites care about Firefox
I don’t believe, you should expect all browsers to implement all new web features in under a year. It takes time, like new C++ or C standarts. An like with all other standarts, the more parties are involved the more time it takes to adopt it.
Haha, one year? How quaint. (Cries into ISO C++ standards)
You can’t count chrome and edge as two different browsers…
MDN does, not my decision
They keep them grouped together though. If you look closely, they’re in the same bubble while firefox is in another one. Probably shows both for the convenience of most devs.
(also Microsoft being Microsoft might shoehorn in some feature no other normal browser would just because)
It’s actually Google doing that these days, but they do it on webkit directly and so everything but Firefox gets their experiments too.
I think they’re in the same bubble because they both support the feature
Happy cake day !
they are grouped and as they are different browsers that theoretically could have different blink versions I feel like it makes sense.
The people who use MDN for their work need to though
You know what still works? HTML tables.
Suck it, all of the 2000s webdev.
What’s worse than div soup? Table ware.
Even apple phones added flexbox support in like 2022.
Flexbox spam is the new tables.2022? That’s in the future
Right? What year is your org up to?
Feel free to answer in terms of OS or framework version.
Last website I built used no CSS or JavaScript
Living in a future utopia
AngularJS
God damn it I’m getting old. I had to seriously reconsider and reparse 2022 like nine times.
Don’t forget to add
role="none"for accessibility.oh no
Anyway
Thank god for tailwind templates wouldn’t get anywhere without them
Gradual adoption is fine. It’s so much better than seeing StackOverflow answers from like 2013, and knowing not a goddamn one of them works anymore. It’s massively better than having to write separate code for IE and Netscape.
Wait until you find out that people made and still make sites that load on both IE and Netscape.
🙋♂️
…Did you add an unescaped RTL toggle character on your user name?
</span></div>For the record, I noticed because I use Friendica:
Jeroba only flips the instance domain, that is way more wild

Voyager just ignores it
Yay I am in screenshot
What’s it like being famous? 🤩
Meh
📸
Funnily enough, it is correctly escaped in the client they developed, Photon

it actually isnt intentional that it works fine, it’s some miracle of how i split the instance name and the username in markup. i was a little disappointed that nothing funny happened when i added that initially
Call me unsurprised if @Xylight added it as a way to test for rendering errors across Fediverse clients
Same with voyager

Nice
i do remember doing that a long time ago
Doing QA testing for free? You and lil bobby tables would get along great
I strongly think Lemmy clients should have a toggle to show usernames instead of display names. Some of the Unicode is super obnoxious.
Some Lemmy clients like summit do (which I keep on, because display names are often cancer)
And now you’re about to nerd-snipe me into checking if control characters are valid for user names in ActivityPub
There’s probably some restrictions because I tried making an instance that had a user with a completely empty username and it didn’t federate.
Connect lets you filter out the Unicode into a-z, which is nice
By the way, if you want to replicate this effect for fun and profit, the control character you’re searching for is U+202E RIGHT-TO-LEFT OVERRIDE (or RLO for short)
That’s like wanting to use a just standardized media format.
Windows native support for MKV (2002) and HEVC (2013): 2019
There ought to be some kind of 2016 css subset that everyone sticks to and then we can reconsider maybe updating it to include any newer stuff that’s absolutely essential once every ten years.
that mentality is one reason websites spam JavaScript today, because native features of the markup language were being added too slow
Expecting the runtime/browser to ship a native implementation of virtually everything you might want to do in a turing-complete language, is also really not sustainable, though.
Something like C/C++ does? JS16, JS20, JS24?
Progressive enhancement is a cool thing
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