@rlemon You were also running IE11 on Windows 7, but were unable to repro @AwalGarg's issue, right? Could you also shoot me the results of dxdiag on your machine?
@SecondRikudo There was an issue with the Emulation tab in IE11 on Windows 7 causing numerous viewport artifacts to be rendered. See @AwalGarg's screenshot from above.
@AwalGarg The "zoomed in" issue is due to stretching the smaller resolution out over the full width of the browser window. It's the opposite of what we'd classically see on iOS where larger sites were squished down into the smaller screensize.
@AwalGarg I wasn't able to repro the issue you are seeing; I setup a Windows 7 x64 box with 1gb of ram and Internet Explorer 11 - no repro. I'm wondering if it may be related to your graphics card at this point.
@SterlingArcher what browser are they using? Because ie8 & 9 only allow cross-origin ajax via jsonp... which I'm sure you already know, just reiterating just in case
@NickDugger No need to argue :) It's the typical "Plan B" for so many. jQuery was asked over and over to support it officially but decided not to do so.
@NickDugger Let me know when you run into issues with Internet Explorer (twitter: jonathansampson, email: [email protected]) and I will personally advocate for you internally.
@NickDugger You'd be amazed at how many problems you find with all browsers when you spend your day trying to find problems in browsers (like me, many days) :)
@JonathanSampson Here's an idea. Just make IE9- not work anymore. At all. Show a "UPDATE NOW OR YOUR COMPUTER WILL CATCH FIRE" message, and the problem solves itself :)
@taco ...because seven ate nine. Sorry, had to say it. I'm not sure of every reason behind the version-leap, but I can say that the work involved in the next version was pretty incredible, and I'm not mad that they broke-sequence to name it "10". I honestly don't know what the specific thoughts were for doing so though.
@SecondRikudo You would have multi-trillion dollar companies ceasing to function within minutes if that were the case. Your cable company would probably shut down operations immediately, as would your gas provider, etc. If we were to make IE9 and below stop working (not that we even could), it would lead to the rise of the Zombie apocalypse for certain.
The most logical reason I read was that the new version of windows is meant to be the last version they are going to give a number to. Apprently they didn't want to be stuck on 9 forever
Lunch time for me, folks. I'll be back on later. Please feel free to shoot me any thoughts/comments/complaints about Internet Explorer: [email protected], or on twitter: jonathansampson.
@djfrsn Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
the only solutions I could think of were 1. they were trying to avoid any perceived inferiority from apple being at OS X and windows "only" being at 9, or 2. some strange legacy issues
@TomášAresakMalčánek yeah it has do with with the way javascript loads. It is probably loading before your streamer.js script is loaded. So put the code in a different script tag and in a document.ready method
@TravisJ I stopped reading after "My Dearest Rebecca, the winter is colder this year in Wilhelm. The dogs remain perched and guarding the remaining rations of food that we have left..." :)
@corvid - questions should contain the set of elements with class="question" inside of <form id="myform">. If there is only one, then it will be <div class="question">. If that div had an id of "matchedquestion", then the result would essentially contain $("#matchedquestion")
@TravisJ Were you more specific about what the "update the OS code" is in Internet Explorer? I have only read three paragraphs, and was already wondering if you had some specific exploits in the past, or something else you could share.
When they call with automated messages, I call them back after I find their real number on every compile when I wait.
So, I'd call them maybe 60 times asking them trivia, asking them about the meaning of life and telling them how awesome my dog is. There are a bunch of places here who are really sure who's a good boy.
@JonathanSampson - The background included points to the exploits used, which include bypassing the sandbox and executing code from the browser's runtime environment which contains access to updating the operating system included in the Internet Explorer 4 code.