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Microsoft Confirms IE8 Has 3 Render Modes

Dak RIT writes "In a blog post this week, Microsoft's IE Platform Architect, Chris Wilson, confirmed that IE8 will use three distinct modes to render web pages. The first two modes will render pages the same as IE7, depending on whether or not a DOCTYPE is provided ('Quirks Mode' and 'Standards Mode'). However, in order to take advantage of the improved standards compliance in IE8, Web developers will have to opt-in by adding an additional meta tag to their web pages. This improved standards mode is the same that was recently reported to pass the Acid 2 test, as was discussed here."

6 of 525 comments (clear)

  1. Third mode. by ShawnCplus · · Score: -1, Troll

    Standards, Quirks and Useless Crap. Sounds good.

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  2. DAMN YOU, MIKKKR0$$$L0TH!!!!1!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Damn you to hell, M$!!! Now that IE will be standards complaint, WTF are we supposed to whine and cry like little babies about?!?!

    Please, think of the babies!

  3. First by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll


    Communist Party First Post.

    Vote Communist for a Change

  4. Not seeing the logic here... by RollingThunder · · Score: -1, Troll

    Webmonkey's mental path...

    "So, I could add a special tag, and it'll make the browser pickier and my job harder...."

    "Yeah, I'll get riiiiight on that".

    Seriously, where is the benefit to the web devs to turn on this mode?

  5. Re:Just Like Before by dedazo · · Score: 1, Troll
    If IE8 works as advertised and renders in standards-compliance mode, then I suspect eventually no one will care. My existing apps don't break, and any new development I do can be standards-specific as well. If you're developing correctly then you can add that header from a centralized location to all your pages and be done with it. But I don't see how Microsoft cannot set the default engine to behave as IE6 does. That would simply break too many things. They have no choice but to find a balance. This is again a situation they contributed a lot to, but complaining about it won't make it go away. Inside the corporate world people could give a rat's ass about standards or browser-agnostic code or pixel-perfect CSS positioning. They just want their payroll/purchasing/inventory system to work.

    If IE8 doesn't deliver on the standards thing and doesn't render the same (or sufficiently close) to Firefox and Opera (not to mention DOM fixes), then this whole thing is moot anyway. I can understand IE7 not being perfectly compliant, but IE8 better be.

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  6. Re:Just Like Before by dedazo · · Score: 1, Troll

    Well I doubt Microsoft can do a lot about that, other than perhaps convincing more people to use their newer tools which output valid [X]HTML.

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    Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo