Metro Internet Explorer
Click the Internet Explorer Metro pane and a full-screen version of the browser will appear. This is touch-friendly, and has some pluses for mouse users: right-clicking lets you pin a site to your Metro screen, for instance, or open a new browser tab or switch to an old one.
But if you prefer the old-style IE interface, that's available, too - open the desktop and launch it, or just hold down the Windows key and press 1.
Internet Explorer 10 is not currently available for Windows 7. The most recent release for Windows 7 was Internet Explorer 10 Platform Preview Build 2, on June 29, 2011. Therefore, you will notice that the newer features mentioned in this guide are not yet available in the most recent version of IE10 Platform Preview for Windows 7. For a list of changes from Internet Explorer Platform Preview Build 2, see Revision History. For a comprehensive list of all new features, see below.
When it's released, Internet Explorer 10 will be available for Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2008 R2, and Windows Server 8 Beta.
Listed here are new developer features for Internet Explorer 10. In addition to reading the guide, be sure to see the Release Notesfor installation information and known issues, as well as the Internet Explorer Test Drive site for new demos and examples. You can also obtain detailed technical information about developer features by visiting the Internet Explorer Developer Center and the MSDN Library.
This pre-release version of Internet Explorer 10—as well as Metro style apps using JavaScript—contains support for the following developer features. Except where noted, these features work identically in Internet Explorer 10 and Metro style apps using JavaScript.
Compatibility
User-agent String
Compatibility Modes
Interoperable Quirks Mode
CSS
Advanced Layout
CSS3 Exclusions
CSS3 Regions
CSS3 Multi-column Layout
CSS3 Flexible Box ("Flexbox") Layout
CSS3 Grid Alignment
CSS Device Adaptation
Visual Effects
CSS3 3-D Transforms
CSS3 Animations
CSS3 Fonts
CSS3 Gradients
CSS3 Transitions
CSS3 Text
Text Drop Shadows
Hyphenation
Panning and Zooming
Removal of Style Sheet Limits
DOM
Advanced hit-testing APIs
The createContextualFragment method
Floating-point values in CSSOM
Media query listeners
Pointer and gesture events
XMLHttpRequest enhancements
ECMAScript 5
ECMAScript 5 strict mode
F12 Developer Tools
Debugging Web Workers in F12 Developer Tools
HTML5
Asynchronous script execution
Application Cache API ("AppCache")
Drag-and-drop APIs
File API
Forms
History
Parsing
Sandbox
Spellcheck
Video
Web Workers
Channel messaging
WebSockets
IndexedDB
SVG
SVG Filters
Performance
The requestAnimationFrame method
Page Visibility
The setImmediate method
Navigation Timing
Windows 8 Integration
Link Preview
Connect Your Website to Your Metro style app
Revision History
Developer audience
Internet Explorer 10 Guide for Developers is written for use by Web developers and designers, plus those interested in developing for Metro style apps using JavaScript in Windows 8, to learn about the developer features coming to the next version of Internet Explorer.
Click the Internet Explorer Metro pane and a full-screen version of the browser will appear. This is touch-friendly, and has some pluses for mouse users: right-clicking lets you pin a site to your Metro screen, for instance, or open a new browser tab or switch to an old one.
But if you prefer the old-style IE interface, that's available, too - open the desktop and launch it, or just hold down the Windows key and press 1.
Internet Explorer 10 is not currently available for Windows 7. The most recent release for Windows 7 was Internet Explorer 10 Platform Preview Build 2, on June 29, 2011. Therefore, you will notice that the newer features mentioned in this guide are not yet available in the most recent version of IE10 Platform Preview for Windows 7. For a list of changes from Internet Explorer Platform Preview Build 2, see Revision History. For a comprehensive list of all new features, see below.
When it's released, Internet Explorer 10 will be available for Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2008 R2, and Windows Server 8 Beta.
Listed here are new developer features for Internet Explorer 10. In addition to reading the guide, be sure to see the Release Notesfor installation information and known issues, as well as the Internet Explorer Test Drive site for new demos and examples. You can also obtain detailed technical information about developer features by visiting the Internet Explorer Developer Center and the MSDN Library.
This pre-release version of Internet Explorer 10—as well as Metro style apps using JavaScript—contains support for the following developer features. Except where noted, these features work identically in Internet Explorer 10 and Metro style apps using JavaScript.
Compatibility
User-agent String
Compatibility Modes
Interoperable Quirks Mode
CSS
Advanced Layout
CSS3 Exclusions
CSS3 Regions
CSS3 Multi-column Layout
CSS3 Flexible Box ("Flexbox") Layout
CSS3 Grid Alignment
CSS Device Adaptation
Visual Effects
CSS3 3-D Transforms
CSS3 Animations
CSS3 Fonts
CSS3 Gradients
CSS3 Transitions
CSS3 Text
Text Drop Shadows
Hyphenation
Panning and Zooming
Removal of Style Sheet Limits
DOM
Advanced hit-testing APIs
The createContextualFragment method
Floating-point values in CSSOM
Media query listeners
Pointer and gesture events
XMLHttpRequest enhancements
ECMAScript 5
ECMAScript 5 strict mode
F12 Developer Tools
Debugging Web Workers in F12 Developer Tools
HTML5
Asynchronous script execution
Application Cache API ("AppCache")
Drag-and-drop APIs
File API
Forms
History
Parsing
Sandbox
Spellcheck
Video
Web Workers
Channel messaging
WebSockets
IndexedDB
SVG
SVG Filters
Performance
The requestAnimationFrame method
Page Visibility
The setImmediate method
Navigation Timing
Windows 8 Integration
Link Preview
Connect Your Website to Your Metro style app
Revision History
Developer audience
Internet Explorer 10 Guide for Developers is written for use by Web developers and designers, plus those interested in developing for Metro style apps using JavaScript in Windows 8, to learn about the developer features coming to the next version of Internet Explorer.
No comments:
Post a Comment