On 5/26/06, Colin Barrett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I don't mean to white knight, but I don't think Rentzsch was saying "WebKit sucks, Firefox roolz". I think he was merely pointing out that there are still problems with Dashcode becoming a full-fledged AJAX IDE. I haven't read any of the other blog posts on Dashcode, I don't know what they're saying. However, I think, in general, it's important to remember: 1) Dashcode isn't even officially released. It's only through a mistake that we even know about it. 2) Safari, JSCore, WebCore, and WebKit have spent a lot less time as mature frameworks than their Moz equivalents. There has been a lot of improvement since WebKit went public, and I think we're going to continue to see more. The "pundits" have a valid point: at this stage, JSCore is still playing catchup with FF. That's a bit of a red herring, though. What's important is that the WebKit guys are playing the game—unlike IE, which has gone nowhere. You miss 100% of the shots you don't take. -Colin
Yes but ... It turns out I read the page on the Javascript engine a while back its not changed much since then. It would be nice if some concrete plans or proposal to improve JSCore were presented for example it would be possible to integrate spidermonkey behind the JSCore api and replace the exsisting interperter. That approach has a lot of plusses they firefox/webkit team can join forces on the JS interpeter . It already has a C api Bytecode support and E4X the three main features requested. Collaboration here is immensly valuable and should not be underestimated. Whats missing is a good garbage collector or more important a plugin framework for one and its a bit bloated this can be fixed. Its what I conisider and obvious solution so explaining why or why not that approach should be taken would be valuable. Mike
On May 25, 2006, at 9:22 PM, David D. Kilzer wrote: WebKit's JavaScript engine is a completely different code base than the one in Firefox. Although WebKit's JS engine has not achieved feature-parity with Firefox, there are a number of people spending their own time documenting bugs, writing test cases, and coding fixes for these bugs. And that doesn't even include the Apple employees working on the project. It's a lot easier to post a blog entry saying that WebKit lacks a feature than it is to implement a missing feature or fix a broken feature. Dave On May 25, 2006, at 10:50 PM, Colin Barrett wrote: [...] My main question is: Is WebKit's JS worse than FF's, or simply not the same, which could lead to breakage. -Colin On May 25, 2006, at 3:04 PM, Abhi Beckert wrote: I've seen several blog posts recently (eg: http://rentzsch.com/code/dashcodeForAjaxAppDevelopment) that boldly state WebKit's "ajax support" is vastly inferior to FireFox. [...] _______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list [email protected] http://www.opendarwin.org/mailman/listinfo/webkit-dev
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