caniuse
modern-css-reset
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caniuse | modern-css-reset | |
---|---|---|
382 | 3 | |
5,485 | 2,918 | |
- | - | |
9.5 | 0.0 | |
2 days ago | 12 months ago | |
JavaScript | CSS | |
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
caniuse
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Free Resources Every Web Developer Should Know About
Can I Use (https://caniuse.com/)
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Speedometer 3.0: A Shared Browser Benchmark for Web Application Responsiveness
> Is it though?
In my experience it's the buggiest browser out of the big three, and is often missing basic features like e.g.:
https://caniuse.com/?search=opus
Supported in Firefox for *12 years* now, in Chrome for 10, still no support in Safari.
They only "support" Opus audio in their special snowflake '.caf' container, which is super buggy and the last time I checked no open source program could even generate Opus '.caf' files that could be played by Safari on all Apple platforms. I ended up writing a custom converter which takes a standard '.opus' file and remuxes it on-the-fly (I only store '.opus' files on my server) into Safari-compatible '.caf' files, taking special care to massage it so that it avoids all of their demuxer/decoder bugs. You shouldn't have to do this to have cross-browser high quality audio!
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Streaming HTML out of order without JavaScript
Seems like browser support is pretty universal, even says so in the article
> All browsers support streaming HTML
And the caniuse is promising: https://caniuse.com/?search=slot
Well I'll be! In my mind I had this clear picture of Firefox implementing it.
It correct, it was only Chrome: https://caniuse.com/?search=html%20import
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IPissed: Apple is after web capabilities to protect close to 100B App Store Tax
https://caniuse.com/?search=web%20bluetooth
which might be great because you have the choice...
and you can use open source chromium or brave (like the jvm to run cross platform java) to run web apps seemlessly that need web bluetooth or such but use safari or firefox for personal use if you find them more secure
I mean using chromium engine as the running environment where chromium only ever runs special trusted web domains and never goes to other "malicious" web domains that may fuck up iOS as Apple claims would be still a secure choice
like you will not download spyware from Apple Store because you are an adult not because Apple can protect you there
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WebAssembly Playground
I'm developing a wasm game, and currently I am targeting WebGL2 in order to run in iOS Safari.
Me (and others, I'm sure) are currently waiting for WebGPU [1] to land in Safari so it will make sense to target it.
WebGPU allows for simplified porting of desktop apps to the web, such as WGSL shaders [2]
WebGPU will be the next big thing, and currently it is enabled on Chrome Windows/macOS, and can be enabled in Firefox Nightly with a config setting.
Hopefully, 2024 will be the year of WebGPU!
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Why Isn't the <HTML> Element 100% Supported on CanIUse.com?
> a lot of the data on the site actually comes from MDN
Eh... not really.
The feature support matrix (as linked on CanIUse) comes from the browser-compat-data repo. Here's the HTML element's source data: https://github.com/mdn/browser-compat-data/blob/main/html/el...
This doesn't contain the testing and usage info that CanIUse cites for support, though, just which browser versions included which features.
CanIUse also points to their own repo, which contains a lot of data: https://github.com/fyrd/caniuse
But I can't find an easy entry point to find where they're getting the numbers for a specific element. The data on there seems to be primarily for features.
So the more precise question is, where is CanIUse getting HTML element testing and usage numbers from? Because that seems to be the issue.
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The web just gets better with Interop 2024
I meant across all browsers since Interop is about raising the bar on all browser capability.
Right now, no other browsers support those features.
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Apple Announces Changes to iOS, Safari, and the App Store in the European Union
> A new version of Safari shipped 17 times in the last 28 month
> Yes, not as frequent as monthly releases, but Apple shipped 7 Safari updates on iOS in 2023.
That's a very recent change: prior to 2022 Apple had far fewer updates to Safari on both macOS and iOS - and still witholds Safari updates from older iOS versions - for example, there was only 1 macOS Safari update per year between 2008 and 2015, and only 2 updates per year from 2015 to 2022; while things were just as sparse on iOS.
The data is all here: click on the "Date relative" view on any of the items on https://caniuse.com/?search=webkit
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Starting to write CSS in 2023 will be different
Baseline is coming to caniuse.com soon! This blog post will introduce this integration and explore some of the features included in Baseline 2023. According to the new definition of benchmark , the feature lifecycle is divided into two stages. The first option is newly launched , and then fully launched after 30 months. If a feature is interoperable in the following browsers, it will become part of the new features provided by Baseline:
modern-css-reset
- What do you do when your css doesn't look right on another browser just because it doesn't ?
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Designing and Developing My Portfolio - v3
Again, coming into this with an idea of a design and color scheme helped immensely. Hell, I had already picked out my colors and fonts, so I got to work creating my SCSS variables, linking to Google Fonts for Poppins and Open Sans, and prettying up my new portfolio. Oh, and I of course created a CSS Reset using Andy Bell's Modern CSS Reset.
What are some alternatives?
browserslist - 🦔 Share target browsers between different front-end tools, like Autoprefixer, Stylelint and babel-preset-env
caniemail - Can I email… Support tables for HTML and CSS in emails.
postcss-preset-env - Convert modern CSS into something browsers understand
modern-normalize - 🐒 Normalize browsers' default style
WHATWG HTML Standard - HTML Standard
Servo - Servo, the embeddable, independent, memory-safe, modular, parallel web rendering engine
Av1an - Cross-platform command-line AV1 / VP9 / HEVC / H264 encoding framework with per scene quality encoding
wpt - Test suites for Web platform specs — including WHATWG, W3C, and others
Sass - Sass makes CSS fun!
css-modules - Documentation about css-modules
uPlot - 📈 A small, fast chart for time series, lines, areas, ohlc & bars
WebKit - Home of the WebKit project, the browser engine used by Safari, Mail, App Store and many other applications on macOS, iOS and Linux.