jQuery 2.0 Leaves Behind Older IE Browsers |
Written by Alex Armstrong |
Friday, 19 April 2013 |
JQuery 2.0 has been released. It is smaller and faster due to not supporting Internet Explorer prior to IE9, a move that pleases most developers. Having to supporting all the existing browsers is a headache for developers. Internet Explorer 6 is such a headache that Microsoft itself has been campaigning to eradicate it. The jQuery team has taken the decision not to let old versions of IE interfere with the performance of "the modern web" any longer and jQuery 2.0 drops compatibility with IE 6, 7, and 8. The next browsers to go will be Android/WebKit 2.x, but currently Android 2.x market share precludes this.
The benefit of reducing support for old browsers is that the final 2.0.0 file is 12% percent smaller than the 1.9.1 file and developers can exclude combinations of 12 different modules to create a custom version that is even smaller. In terms of functionality, jQuery 2.0 is API-compatible with 1.9, which when it was released in January 2013 had already removed a lot of old code to produce a streamlined API. The jQuery team aims to minimize divergence between the 1.x and 2.x branches and the main changes in 1.9 are all included in 2.0 and a jQuery 1.10 is expected to be released within a couple of months to incorporate the bug fixes and differences reported from both the 1.9 and 2.0 beta cycles. The plan going forward is that the jQuery 1.x.x branch will continue to accommodate older browsers and to maintain feature parity between 1.10 and 2.0, 1.11 and 2.1, etc. Not only is jQuery 2.0 smaller and faster, it can be used in JavaScript environments where the code needed for old-IE compatibility often causes problems of its own. Developers who are upgrading from a version before 1.9 are advised to use the jQuery Migrate plugin, that was released at the same time as jQuery 1.9 to cope with problems arising from the changes made. It not only provides warning when deprecated functionality is in use, it can also restore APIs to allow production code to continue running.
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Last Updated ( Friday, 19 April 2013 ) |