On May 27, 2013 11:53 PM, "Hadrian Węgrzynowski" <hadr...@hawski.com> wrote: > > For example support only two fonts: monospace and proportional.
And have some sites broken because the idiots who made them did some pixel-exact fine tuning based on some particular font's properties. I still hit the occasions when the reminder of the line ends up hidden under some picture because deja vu is a bit wider then aerial (or whatever they use on Windows these days). > Only partial CSS support is needed. Problem starts with JS. Sure only partial support for CSS (and JS: world would be a better place without alert()) is needed. Unfortunately, this "partial" is what web developers use, which is pretty much everything in Webkit. Even the lack of most useless CSS properties may render the browser useless for carelessly designed website, not to mention print views and other stuff you only need less then 1% of time. Imagine a document with all section numbering done with CSS counters and unlinked cross-references like "see paragraph 2.5.6.1." Note, the features you don't expect in lynx are often obligatory for graphical browser. ---- Dmitrij D. Czarkoff