• Chozo@fedia.io
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    20 hours ago

    Often times firefox is following the css specifications in how to process it and chrome isnt. Developers then do things, see it works in chrome and leave at that, not knowing what they did is wrong and broken.

    What you’re saying is that Firefox isn’t doing what developers are expecting it to do; that just means that Firefox isn’t compatible with what developers are actually making. That’s hardly a strong defense for Firefox, as all that situation does is create a subsection of the internet that only works on Firefox.

    There’s a difference between following the standards as-written, and the standards as-practiced. If 99% of developers are doing something one way, then that’s the way it’s done, regardless of what some consortium of developers at Mozilla thinks. Firefox saying “erm excuse me but ThE rUlEs say yadda yadda so I won’t render the page as you expected” while Chrome just says “fuck it, here’s your page”, is precisely why Chrome has the higher userbase and is the de facto standard; it does what the users and the developers both expect it to do, and doesn’t give any fuss about it. Not saying it should be this way, but it is.

    Firefox’s random incompatibilities don’t actually make for a safer internet, as the average user is going to pursue the path of least resistance. So if their pages stop working in Firefox, they’re just gonna switch to Chrome, or worse.