I've got it, thanks!
Olaf
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Sent from the Apache Flex Development mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Very often there’s more than one way to achieve a goal. When given a choice
between approaches, I’d pick the one which has the best browser compatibility.
Given no other choice, I’d fall back to browser sniffing.
> On Aug 14, 2017, at 9:25 AM, Olaf Krueger wrote:
>
>> I found one work-around f
Bonjour,
En congés jusqu'au 4 septembre, je prendrais connaissance de votre message à
mon retour.
Cordialement,
Vincent/AFTER24
>I found one work-around for one scenario and I’m investigating another for a
different one.
What do you mean with work-around?
Is it the approach to find some code that works with all browsers or do
you're using browser sniffing (Class BrowserInfo as you mentioned above)?
Thanks,
Olaf
--
Vi
You might have misunderstood me.
Thee are quite a few inconsistencies worked around already.
The advantage of the framework code is that we can include workarounds so end
developers don’t need to.
For example:
Today I ran into flexbox inconsistencies in layouts. Safari behaves different
than
>There’s nothing really built in
Mhh... but I wonder if FlexJS can not guarantee consistency through
different browsers and different platforms, could we really speak about a
cross platform framework then?
Or do I miss something?
Thanks,
Olaf
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There’s nothing really built in, but there is a class that does browser
sniffing so it’s possible to write conditional code.
Check out BrowserInfo.
> On Aug 12, 2017, at 9:37 PM, Olaf Krueger wrote:
>
> And if there's nothing already implemented to ensure browser compatibility
> what could fol
And if there's nothing already implemented to ensure browser compatibility
what could folks do if they have issues with some browsers?
Is there something like a conditional compiling for different browsers?
Thanks,
Olaf
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But what mechanism takes care of the compatibility with the main browsers
like IE, Edge, Chrome, Firefox, Safari and all those particular versions?
Or is there no magic needed and it just works for whatever needed?
Thanks,
Olaf
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I think it’s IE9 or later.
> On Aug 12, 2017, at 9:10 PM, Olaf Krueger wrote:
>
> Hi,
> I'd like to write some docs about the browser compatibility of FlexJS and
> wonder how this technically works.
> Is there some magic implemented within the compiler or is an external lib
> used or is there wh
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