• @guy@lemmy.world
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    139 months ago

    Usually they’re building the website with browserlist and polyfills, and they specify how old a browser they wish to support, usually by analysing percentages of public usage, or they allow types only supported in newer browsers. Meaning if they use a feature only available in newer browsers, then it won’t be automatically backported to support older browsers.

    But that’s only if they actually use those features, they’re just available to them. And it’ll only break in those places they do use them, which could be quite little of the site.

    So often it’s just “we can’t guarantee it’ll work in your old browser and enough of our users use newer browsers that we’ll block you and not care”.

    • @Cyyy@lemmy.world
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      09 months ago

      yupp, and i hate that. i use a firefox version that don’t supports private fields, and because a common js lib uses them a lot of websites suddenly stopped working for me just because of this bs. instead of just using a normal variable they use private fields and kill a ton of older browsers by doing so. and most website owners don’t care so asking them just leads to them saying “just upgrade bro”.

          • @0x0@programming.dev
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            49 months ago

            are implementing more and more forced features you can’t disable

            Not even through about:config?

            • @Cyyy@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              nope, not even with about:config.

              usually it starts with “we let you disable it still with about:config”, but then in later versions they kill it off so the variables don’t do anything anymore. then they remove it completly in even later versions.

      • @redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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        19 months ago

        private fields

        Man, javascript is starting to turn into java, isn’t it? They added encapsulation. What else they’re going to add?