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3 years ago
3 years ago
In other words: I could shop on ASDA site without any problem
3 years ago
Standards are there to ensure liberty to the users and to compete on fair grounds. If the "designer" decided to be non-standard and his site won't work "as he intended" anywhere else than in IE, then he intended something wrong.
3 years ago
3 years ago
I think Chris's "standards are for losers" (not his exact words of course, but that's the vibe I was getting) attitude is the sort of thing that contributes to the incompatibility mess that spurned the browser standardisation movement in the first place.
3 years ago
IE is crap and the reason its parser lets you get away with things is it probably isn't complete or microsoft wants people to fall into the IE trap.
3 years ago
http://www.chrisbeach.co.uk/core/scripts/entryV...
http://www.chrisbeach.co.uk/core/scripts/entryV...
http://www.chrisbeach.co.uk/core/scripts/entryV...
http://www.chrisbeach.co.uk/core/scripts/entryV...
and
http://www.chrisbeach.co.uk/core/scripts/entryV...
My issue with Firefox's inability to render broken HTML is fundamental. The job of the browser is to parse the web and render as much content as possible. That's what the user wants. The most powerful parser is the one that can correctly understand its input, no matter how obfuscated it is.
Many have said that IE should not patch over other people's mistakes. By the same token do you criticise the efficiency of the fuel filter in a car, and suggest that if we get contaminated fuel, the car should choke and stop, so that the fuel producer will know there's a problem?
I believe the browser should render all broken markup that is _unambiguous_. Of course, choking on ambiguous mistakes is fair enough. The responsibility for finding flaws in code lies with the HTML/CSS validator.
By bloating the HTML/CSS standards (with the unmemorable DOCTYPE definition etc) and making the parsers stricter, we are discouraging beginner developers from writing the code by hand, and encouraging them to use tools like Frontpage. This is in noone's best interests. Everyone should take pride in their code, and one should code for standards. Whose standards one chooses is a whole different debate.
3 years ago
Firefox, on the other hand, adheres to a standard that demonstrates its willingness to compete on a level playing field with any other browser. It also refuses to cater to the poetic license taken by bad HTML. HTML, the language, is not poetry; it is a computer language with a defined semantic.
3 years ago
"The most powerful parser is the one that can correctly understand its input, no matter how obfuscated it is."
OK you are obviously painfully ignorant of IE's many BUGS. Things that completely break its rendering engine (esp. CSS2), and web developers have to bend over backwards to accomodate. I am a professional web developer, and have developed sites for the likes of Shell, BMW, Honda, United Way, and ATCO. An enormous amount of time is spent accounting for IE's rendering bugs. Google for "peekaboo bug" or "3 pixel gap". Some of the techniques for getting around these IE bugs include using negative margins, or having to specify dimensions when you don't really want to.
Here's a page highlighting some of IE's many horrendous bugs:
http://www.positioniseverything.net/explorer.html
This is your browser that "can understand any input, no matter what"? It completely mangles 100% standards compliant pages on a regular basis.
The only reason so much of the web renders nicely on IE is because 95%+ of the web was built for it, because of its de facto dominance due to being bundled with Windows. This is a vicious cycle we are finally starting to break out of.
3 years ago
3 years ago
My earlier post spoke directly to the importance of maintainability of code. That is the objective of code as poetry. I agree with the idea of the moniker, but I also believe there is a limit to the metaphor.
3 years ago
I don't advise using browser specific extensions unless necessary to adjust for bugs or non-standard behavior, but Mozilla and KHTML have done the right thing here.
3 years ago
I am tired of people making witty websites that don't display properly in IE. "My site is important enough that you'll probably install some crappy browser to read what I have to say."
I am tired of people putting firefox ads all over their sites. It feels like getting teabagged every day.
It is not more secure, it loads slower, and it doesn't come standard with my OS. I don't ever get crashes or spyware, but I spend over 10 hours in front of this computer each day. YOU are using your computer wrong. Stop polluting my screen with your stupid, stupid browser ads, I'd rather "punch the monkey to win $10,000" than install firefox.
Standards? Yes, they are important. Replacing all tables with divs and spans because it's 'trendy'? Give me a break! It is very easy to make pages that look just the same in IE and firefox or any browser, it just takes a little bit of brains. 70% of your visitors will be using IE, do you want to cripple 70% of your visitors? OBVIOUSLY NOT!
Making everyone switch to the same browser is not the solution, making your pages compatible with all browsers is, regardless of whether you are following standards or not. We make websites for visitors, not to satisfy some kind of coding standard, so the least we can do is not impose browsers on people. This is what taking back the web is -- making people not worry about what browser they'll use, because we webmasters can guarantee that pages will look the same on every computer.
I design and code dynamic pages for a living, and I am tired of these amateurs complaining about IE. Do you think your opinion counts? Why not try petitiononline.com to get IE to respect standards, maybe it'll work better than those "spread firefox" buttons. What a damn joke.
In other words, unless you're working at microsoft or coding firefox, you probably shouldn't be worrying about insipid crap like web standards.
Three thumbs down to brainwashed firefox zombies.
3 years ago
A browsers job is not to view any piece of crap that could harm the user and means people are free to write any code causing absolute cayous.
Websites are increasingly now following web standards, and removing improper coding for there websites. This was there and IE's problem, most sites realise this and have no problems. IE 7 beta is also obiding by more webstandards, showing clearly this was IE 6 and befores problem, affecting the entire web and how people code. This will cause as much if not more disruption, because those who built sites only following IE's invalid coding, now have to change that to fit web standards more.
If a company or supplier breaks the rules over years and SOME people become accustom to it (though it very damaging, harmful and time consuming) it does not mean a competitor should come along, and do exactly the same thing.
3 years ago
Anyway, I meant to write "You're not > 'abiding' < by the rules of proper spelling, why should your browser abide by correct standards :)"
I personally can't wait for IE7, it will truly be a step forward.
3 years ago
Remember back when people needed two versions of their site: one for IE, the other for Netscape? That was sheer idiocy (although understandable at the time), and that's why we need to pay attention to standards.
3 years ago
Question 1 - which student learns better
Question 2 - when visiting the country in question, which student fares better?
Grammatical structures are there for a reason - whether one refers to a foreign language or to the source code of a website. Whereas it may seem to be much easier to fail to conform to the strict grammatical structure of html etc, this only works if enough people use the browser which displays this non-compliant code. Thus, if this is not addressed, web site developers will ´find it increasingly difficult to code for the Microsoft offering, as it will be the exception to the rule - simply watch the Firefox space.
3 years ago
You're another who confuses the concept of a web _browser_ with a CSS/HTML _validator_.
The job of a browser is not to mark anything "correct." The browser should render the Web, simply that.
3 years ago
Mozilla looks fine, but IE is messed up.
3 years ago
2 years ago
Glad to read your site,
What the hell is going here?!
Wait for me,
Did you read this?
Can you help me?
I'm back in USSR!
You have a beautiful website!
End :) See you
What do you think?
Good day, I'll be back :)
2 years ago
I just want to say "hello" from Brunei internet community!
Bye, I like ;)
2 years ago
2 years ago