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Tag selected: crossbrowser.
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Saved by uncleflo on April 17th, 2021.
Example Firefox add-ons created using the WebExtensions API WebExtensions are a way to write browser extensions: that is, programs installed inside a web browser that modify the behavior of the browser or web pages loaded by the browser. WebExtensions are built on a set of cross-browser APIs, so WebExtensions written for Google Chrome, Opera, or Edge will, in most cases, run in Firefox too.
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Saved by uncleflo on May 9th, 2018.
Note how the browser reserves some space to the right of this paragraph, just enough to fit a scrollbar. This happens even though there is a decent amount of padding-right.
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Saved by uncleflo on May 9th, 2018.
I have read that offsetLeft and offsetTop do not work properly in all browsers. jQuery.offset() is supposed to provide an abstraction for this to provide the correct value xbrowser. What I am trying to do is get the coordinates of where an element was clicked relative to the top-left of the element. Problem is that jQuery.offset().top is actually giving me a decimal value in FFX 3.6 (in IE and Chrome, the two values match). http://jsfiddle.net/htCPp/ exhibits the issue. If you click the bottom image, jQuery.offset().top returns 327.5, but offsetTop returns 328. I would like to think that offset() is returning the correct value and I should use it because it will work across browsers. However, people obviously cannot click decimals of pixels. Is the proper way to determine the true offset to Math.Round() the offset that jQuery is returning? Should I use offsetTop instead, or some other method entirely?
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Saved by uncleflo on January 20th, 2015.
XRegExp is an open source (MIT License) JavaScript library that provides augmented and extensible regular expressions. You get new syntax, flags, and methods beyond what browsers support natively. XRegExp is also a regex utility belt with tools to make your client-side grepping simpler and more powerful, while freeing you from worrying about pesky cross-browser inconsistencies and the dubious lastIndex property.
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Saved by uncleflo on January 22nd, 2009.
Mono 2.0 has been released! The Mono Project aims to make developers productive and happy: Mono 2.0 is our gift to the world. Sponsored by Novell (http://www.novell.com), the Mono open source project has an active and enthusiastic contributing community and is positioned to become the leading choice for development of Linux applications.
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