• ඞmir
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    697 months ago

    No conflict of interest going on here guys

  • @dhtseany@lemmy.ml
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    687 months ago

    God forbid they tested across the multiple common browsers out there other than Chrome. Every other software development company creating a web app does that, why doesn’t one of the biggest?

    • @dragnet@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      427 months ago

      Sadly no, ever web app company definitely doesn’t test under Firefox. I’m at the point where I use Firefox for general web browsing and Chromium for most web apps.

      • @ripcord@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        In the last 5 years I’ve run across maybe 1 site that didn’t work properly in Firefox. And another that MIGHT not have worked right, but I was only guessing it was related to FF.

        However, since FF dropped PWA support I do use Chrome for a handful of sites that either are PWAs or you can use Chrome’s open as application feature, which is real nice for a few things. Is that what you mean by “Web Apps”?

          • @ripcord@lemmy.world
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            27 months ago

            Thanks. I remember trying it about a year ago but it didn’t work well for some reason. Will give it another try now that I hear it’s working well for you.

        • @dragnet@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          17 months ago

          No, the PWA thing is a separate annoyance. What I find is that in a lot of web apps, the app mostly works fine but has bugs that break certain things or are seriously inconvenient in Firefox only. Two I’ve experienced recently are Nextcloud Office slideshows (I need to search for/open a bug report honestly) and a web based billing software we use at work.

  • katy ✨
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    647 months ago

    they should roll back recaptcha off a cliff so i never have to use it again

  • Mr. Satan
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    437 months ago

    I develop and test only on firefox

    • JackGreenEarth
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      47 months ago

      Me too. But I mainly code for myself, nothing mainstream, so it doesn’t usually matter if it works on other browsers. Usually it does anyway, though.

    • Same, except I’ve been using whatever Tauri packages lately, which on Linux seems to be a webkit browser.

      We support only Chrome at work (B2B app), but I mostly use Firefox.

    • @Legend@lemmy.sdf.org
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      7 months ago

      c/foundthedevil ?

      Edit: These lemmings i swear look at the users name i replied to i was just making a joke .

  • Possibly linux
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    197 months ago

    I wish Firefox had an large enough market share where websites would work around it

  • @elxeno@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    The script attempted to modify a div’s background color using document.body.removeChild, but as the script was loaded in the HTML head, the DOM had not loaded

    Isn’t that how it works/always worked? When i was learning html/js ages ago i had to use some event listener (DOMContentLoaded i think) or put the script just before </body> (for any code that should run on load and interacts with the DOM).

    And how do you change the background by removing a child?

    • @ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
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      37 months ago

      And how do you change the background by removing a child?

      The removed child could also have a background color, and it could span the entire area of the parent element.
      But it’s weird because the quote says “modify a div’s background color”, and this way you don’t actually modify that, but only it’s appearance.

      Or maybe it’s done with some CSS trickery, looking for a specific child in it’s selector?

  • Wait, is that, why PayPal didn’t work and I nearly missed my train? Wow.

    And I thought the PayPal devs were stupid, but apparently it was google themselves.