59
votes

I am trying to detect the chrome and safari browser using jquery or javascript. I thought we are not supposed to use jQuery.browser. Are there any suggestions here? Thanks a lot!

9
You can use jQuery.browser, it's just not recommended because the user agent can be spoofed. Instead, it's recommended you use feature detection, which isn't spoofable.Ian
Why do you need to detect Chrome or Safari? What are you trying to do?Chris Pratt
How could it use feature detection? Two browsers with the same features would give the same results!Quentin
@PeeHaa You should learn how to use Google and jQuery.browser: api.jquery.com/jQuery.browser . It uses the useragent, and jQuery recommends using feature detection. jQuery.browser is deprecatedIan
@PeeHaa — Great. So Chrome 27 doesn't support FOO but Safari does. So you decide which is which based on various things including support for FOO. Then Chrome 28 comes out and it does support FOO, so the old jQuery thinks that Chrome 28 is Safari. (And that example demonstrates why feature detection is better then browser detection and why you can't use feature detection to reliably determine browser - keeping up to date is hard)Quentin

9 Answers

83
votes

If you dont want to use $.browser, take a look at case 1, otherwise maybe case 2 and 3 can help you just to get informed because it is not recommended to use $.browser (the user agent can be spoofed using this). An alternative can be using jQuery.support that will detect feature support and not agent info.

But...

If you insist on getting browser type (just Chrome or Safari) but not using $.browser, case 1 is what you looking for...


This fits your requirement:

Case 1: (No jQuery and no $.browser, just javascript)

Live Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/oscarj24/DJ349/

var isChrome = /Chrome/.test(navigator.userAgent) && /Google Inc/.test(navigator.vendor);
var isSafari = /Safari/.test(navigator.userAgent) && /Apple Computer/.test(navigator.vendor);

if (isChrome) alert("You are using Chrome!");
if (isSafari) alert("You are using Safari!");

These cases I used in times before and worked well but they are not recommended...

Case 2: (Using jQuery and $.browser, this one is tricky)

Live Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/oscarj24/gNENk/

$(document).ready(function(){

    /* Get browser */
    $.browser.chrome = /chrome/.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());

    /* Detect Chrome */
    if($.browser.chrome){
        /* Do something for Chrome at this point */
        /* Finally, if it is Chrome then jQuery thinks it's 
           Safari so we have to tell it isn't */
        $.browser.safari = false;
    }

    /* Detect Safari */
    if($.browser.safari){
        /* Do something for Safari */
    }

});

Case 3: (Using jQuery and $.browser, "elegant" solution)

Live Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/oscarj24/uJuEU/

$.browser.chrome = $.browser.webkit && !!window.chrome;
$.browser.safari = $.browser.webkit && !window.chrome;

if ($.browser.chrome) alert("You are using Chrome!");
if ($.browser.safari) alert("You are using Safari!");
73
votes

Most of the answers here are obsolete, there is no more jQuery.browser, and why would anyone even use jQuery or would sniff the User Agent is beyond me.

Instead of detecting a browser, you should rather detect a feature
(whether it's supported or not).

The following is false in Mozilla Firefox, Microsoft Edge; it is true in Google Chrome.

"webkitLineBreak" in document.documentElement.style

Note this is not future-proof. A browser could implement the -webkit-line-break property at any time in the future, thus resulting in false detection. Then you can just look at the document object in Chrome and pick anything with webkit prefix and check for that to be missing in other browsers.

11
votes

Instead of detecting a browser, you should rather detect a feature (whether it's supported or not). This is what Modernizr does.

Of course there are cases where you still need to check the browser because you need to work around an issue and not to detect a feature. Specific WebKit check which does not use jQuery $.browser:

var isWebKit = !!window.webkitURL;

As some of the comments suggested the above approach doesn't work for older Safari versions. Updating with another approach suggested in comments and by another answer:

var isWebKit = 'WebkitAppearance' in document.documentElement.style;
8
votes

There is still quirks and inconsistencies in 2019.

For example with scaled svg and pointer events, between browsers.

None of the answer of this topic are working anymore. (maybe those with jquery)

Here is an alternative, by testing with javascript if a css rule is supported, via the native CSS support api. Might evolve, to be adapted!

Note that it's possible to pass many css rules separated by a semicolon, for the finest detection.

if (CSS.supports("( -webkit-box-reflect:unset )")){
  console.log("WEBKIT BROWSER")
  // More math...
 } else {
  console.log("ENJOY")
 }

if (CSS.supports("( -moz-user-select:unset )")){
  console.log("FIREFOX!!!")
 }

Beware to not use it in loops, for performance it's better to populate a constant on load:

const ff = CSS.supports("( -moz-user-select:unset )")
if (ff){ //... } 

Using CSS only, the above would be:

@supports (-webkit-box-reflect:unset) {
  div {
    background: red
  }
}

@supports (-moz-user-select:unset) {
  div {
    background: green
  }
}
<div>
  Hello world!!
</div>

List of possible -webkit- only css rules.

List of possible -moz- only rules.

Can I use css support?

3
votes

/WebKit/.test(navigator.userAgent) — that's it.

2
votes

I am trying to detect the chrome and safari browser using jquery or javascript.

Use jQuery.browser

I thought we are not supposed to use jQuery.browser.

That's because detecting browsers is a bad idea. It is still the best way to detect the browser (when jQuery is involved) if you really intend to do that.

1
votes

you can use this minified jQuery snippet to detect if your user is viewing using a mobile device. If you need to test for a specific device I’ve included a collection of JavaScript snippets below which can be used to detect various mobile handheld devices such as iPad, iPhone, iPod, iDevice, Andriod, Blackberry, WebOs and Windows Phone.

/**
 * jQuery.browser.mobile (http://detectmobilebrowser.com/)
 * jQuery.browser.mobile will be true if the browser is a mobile device
 **/

    (function(a){jQuery.browser.mobile=/android.+mobile|avantgo|bada/|blackberry|blazer|compal|elaine|fennec|hiptop|iemobile|ip(hone|od)|iris|kindle|lge |maemo|midp|mmp|netfront|opera m(ob|in)i|palm( os)?|phone|p(ixi|re)/|plucker|pocket|psp|symbian|treo|up.(browser|link)|vodafone|wap|windows (ce|phone)|xda|xiino/i.test(a)||/1207|6310|6590|3gso|4thp|50[1-6]i|770s|802s|a wa|abac|ac(er|oo|s-)|ai(ko|rn)|al(av|ca|co)|amoi|an(ex|ny|yw)|aptu|ar(ch|go)|as(te|us)|attw|au(di|-m|r |s )|avan|be(ck|ll|nq)|bi(lb|rd)|bl(ac|az)|br(e|v)w|bumb|bw-(n|u)|c55/|capi|ccwa|cdm-|cell|chtm|cldc|cmd-|co(mp|nd)|craw|da(it|ll|ng)|dbte|dc-s|devi|dica|dmob|do(c|p)o|ds(12|-d)|el(49|ai)|em(l2|ul)|er(ic|k0)|esl8|ez([4-7]0|os|wa|ze)|fetc|fly(-|_)|g1 u|g560|gene|gf-5|g-mo|go(.w|od)|gr(ad|un)|haie|hcit|hd-(m|p|t)|hei-|hi(pt|ta)|hp( i|ip)|hs-c|ht(c(-| |_|a|g|p|s|t)|tp)|hu(aw|tc)|i-(20|go|ma)|i230|iac( |-|/)|ibro|idea|ig01|ikom|im1k|inno|ipaq|iris|ja(t|v)a|jbro|jemu|jigs|kddi|keji|kgt( |/)|klon|kpt |kwc-|kyo(c|k)|le(no|xi)|lg( g|/(k|l|u)|50|54|e-|e/|-[a-w])|libw|lynx|m1-w|m3ga|m50/|ma(te|ui|xo)|mc(01|21|ca)|m-cr|me(di|rc|ri)|mi(o8|oa|ts)|mmef|mo(01|02|bi|de|do|t(-| |o|v)|zz)|mt(50|p1|v )|mwbp|mywa|n10[0-2]|n20[2-3]|n30(0|2)|n50(0|2|5)|n7(0(0|1)|10)|ne((c|m)-|on|tf|wf|wg|wt)|nok(6|i)|nzph|o2im|op(ti|wv)|oran|owg1|p800|pan(a|d|t)|pdxg|pg(13|-([1-8]|c))|phil|pire|pl(ay|uc)|pn-2|po(ck|rt|se)|prox|psio|pt-g|qa-a|qc(07|12|21|32|60|-[2-7]|i-)|qtek|r380|r600|raks|rim9|ro(ve|zo)|s55/|sa(ge|ma|mm|ms|ny|va)|sc(01|h-|oo|p-)|sdk/|se(c(-|0|1)|47|mc|nd|ri)|sgh-|shar|sie(-|m)|sk-0|sl(45|id)|sm(al|ar|b3|it|t5)|so(ft|ny)|sp(01|h-|v-|v )|sy(01|mb)|t2(18|50)|t6(00|10|18)|ta(gt|lk)|tcl-|tdg-|tel(i|m)|tim-|t-mo|to(pl|sh)|ts(70|m-|m3|m5)|tx-9|up(.b|g1|si)|utst|v400|v750|veri|vi(rg|te)|vk(40|5[0-3]|-v)|vm40|voda|vulc|vx(52|53|60|61|70|80|81|83|85|98)|w3c(-| )|webc|whit|wi(g |nc|nw)|wmlb|wonu|x700|xda(-|2|g)|yas-|your|zeto|zte-/i.test(a.substr(0,4))})(navigator.userAgent||navigator.vendor||window.opera);

Example Usage:

if(jQuery.browser.mobile)
{
console.log(‘You are using a mobile device!’);
}
else
{
console.log(‘You are not using a mobile device!’);
}

Detect iPad

var isiPad = /ipad/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());
if (isiPad)
{
…
}

Detect iPhone

var isiPhone = /iphone/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());
if (isiPhone)
{
…
}

Detect iPod

var isiPod = /ipod/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());
if (isiPod)
{
…
}

Detect iDevice

var isiDevice = /ipad|iphone|ipod/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());

if (isiDevice)
{
…
}

Detect Andriod

var isAndroid = /android/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());

if (isAndroid)
{
…
}

Detect Blackberry

var isBlackBerry = /blackberry/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());

if (isBlackBerry)
{
…
}

Detect WebOs

var isWebOS = /webos/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());

if (isWebOS)
{
…
}

Detect Windows Phone

var isWindowsPhone = /windows phone/i.test(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase());

if (isWindowsPhone)
{
…
}
1
votes

Many answers here. Here is my first consideration.

Without JavaScript, including the possibility Javascript is initially disabled by the user in his browser for security purposes, to be white listed by the user if the user trusts the site, DOM will not be usable because Javascript is off.

Programmatically, you are left with a backend server-side or frontend client-side consideration.

With the backend, you can use common denominator HTTP "User-Agent" request header and/or any possible proprietary HTTP request header issued by the browser to output browser specific HTML stuff.

With the client site, you may want to enforce Javascript to allow you to use DOM. If so, then you probably will want to first use the following in your HTML page:

<noscript>This site requires Javascript. Please turn on Javascript.</noscript>

While we are heading to a day with every web coder will be dependent on Javascript in some way (or not), today, to presume every user has javascript enabled would be design and product development QA mistake.

I've seen far too may sites who end up with a blank page or the site breaks down because it presumed every user has javascript enabled. No. For security purposes, they may have Javascript initially off and some browsers, like Chrome, will allow the user to white list the web site on a domain by domain basis. Edge is the only browser I am aware of where Microsoft made the decision to completely disable the user's ability to turn off Javascript. Edge doesn't offer a white listing concept hence it is one reason I don't personally use Edge.

Using the tag is a simple way to inform the user your site won't work without Javascript. Once the user turns it on and refreshes/reload the page, DOM is now available to use the techniques cited by the thread replies to detect chrome vs safari.

Ironically, I got here because I was updating by platform and google the same basic question; chrome vs sarafi. I didn't know Chrome creates a DOM object named "chrome" which is really all you need to detect "chrome" vs everything else.

var isChrome = typeof(chrome) === "object";

If true, you got Chrome, if false, you got some other browser.

Check to see if Safari create its own DOM object as well, if so, get the object name and do the same thing, for example:

var isSafari = (typeof(safari) === "object");

Hope these tips help.

0
votes

jQuery provides that:

if ($.browser.webkit){
    ...
}

Further reading at http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.browser/

Update

As noted in other answers/comments, it's always better to check for feature support than agent info. jQuery also provides an object for that: jQuery.support. Check the documentation to see the detailed list features to check for.