217

When I want to detect IE I use this code:

function getInternetExplorerVersion()
{
  var rv = -1;
  if (navigator.appName == 'Microsoft Internet Explorer')
  {
    var ua = navigator.userAgent;
    var re  = new RegExp("MSIE ([0-9]{1,}[\.0-9]{0,})");
    if (re.exec(ua) != null)
      rv = parseFloat( RegExp.$1 );
  }
  return rv;
}
function checkVersion()
{
  var msg = "You're not using Internet Explorer.";
  var ver = getInternetExplorerVersion();

  if ( ver > -1 )
  {
    msg = "You are using IE " + ver;
  }
  alert( msg );
}

But IE11 is returning "You're not using Internet Explorer". How can I detect it?

7
  • 2
    See also stackoverflow.com/questions/17447373/…
    – dave1010
    Dec 2, 2013 at 13:06
  • 1
    Anything based on user agent is flawed. It's too easy to spoof, Now, it may be that this is a not a problem, but it seems to me that a browser detection script should have a fair chance of detecting masquerading. I use a combination of conditional comments, fall-through to trying to coerce the document.documentMode and then look at window.MSInputMethodContext as per Paul Sweatte below. I'd post my code but it's flogging a dead horse.
    – David G
    Jun 18, 2014 at 18:13
  • 3
    IE11 has user-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; Trident/7.0; rv:11.0) like Gecko Os types: 6.1 - win7, 6.3 - win81
    – razor
    Nov 5, 2014 at 10:39
  • 1
    see my answer here stackoverflow.com/questions/21825157/…
    – Royi Namir
    Jan 19, 2015 at 8:30
  • 1
    here's the best solution I've found: stackoverflow.com/a/20201867/2047385 if (Object.hasOwnProperty.call(window, "ActiveXObject") && !window.ActiveXObject) { // is IE11 }
    – xorcus
    May 20, 2015 at 12:58

16 Answers 16

225

IE11 no longer reports as MSIE, according to this list of changes it's intentional to avoid mis-detection.

What you can do if you really want to know it's IE is to detect the Trident/ string in the user agent if navigator.appName returns Netscape, something like (the untested);

function getInternetExplorerVersion()
{
  var rv = -1;
  if (navigator.appName == 'Microsoft Internet Explorer')
  {
    var ua = navigator.userAgent;
    var re = new RegExp("MSIE ([0-9]{1,}[\\.0-9]{0,})");
    if (re.exec(ua) != null)
      rv = parseFloat( RegExp.$1 );
  }
  else if (navigator.appName == 'Netscape')
  {
    var ua = navigator.userAgent;
    var re  = new RegExp("Trident/.*rv:([0-9]{1,}[\\.0-9]{0,})");
    if (re.exec(ua) != null)
      rv = parseFloat( RegExp.$1 );
  }
  return rv;
}

console.log('IE version:', getInternetExplorerVersion());

Note that IE11 (afaik) still is in preview, and the user agent may change before release.

15
  • 84
    it's intentional to avoid mis-detection - Sadly, now that IE11 is released, we have code that is broken in only IE11, whereas a correct detection of IE would have worked...
    – Izkata
    Nov 8, 2013 at 21:18
  • 69
    I converted this solution to a Boolean if the version is less important function isIE() { return ((navigator.appName == 'Microsoft Internet Explorer') || ((navigator.appName == 'Netscape') && (new RegExp("Trident/.*rv:([0-9]{1,}[\.0-9]{0,})").exec(navigator.userAgent) != null))); }
    – rg89
    Nov 26, 2013 at 20:59
  • 6
    @lzkata - Per the html5 spec here, IE is actually following the standard. So yes, it's intentional, but it is per the new standard (deprecating the old html api.) Dec 5, 2013 at 14:17
  • 12
    "the reason they did this was deliberate. They wanted to break browser detection scripts like this." from stackoverflow.com/a/18872067/1066234 ... Actually it should be: 'They wanted to make billion websites break like this.'
    – Avatar
    Dec 8, 2013 at 21:52
  • 16
    This works for me: var isIE11 = !!navigator.userAgent.match(/Trident\/7\./); source
    – Avatar
    Dec 8, 2013 at 22:01
89

Use !(window.ActiveXObject) && "ActiveXObject" in window to detect IE11 explicitly.

To detect any IE (pre-Edge, "Trident") version, use "ActiveXObject" in window instead.

11
  • 2
    This Microsoft article suggests this solution may no longer work msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ie/dn423948(v=vs.85).aspx
    – Alan
    Aug 21, 2014 at 3:14
  • 5
    Actually, this article describes the reason why my method works. Attempting to access window.ActiveXObject, as described in the article, returns undefined in IE11 now (as well as non-Microsoft browsers.) The test using the javascript in operator returns true in all Microsoft browsers, so both are the case strictly in IE11. If Microsoft issues a change to the behavior of the in operator, yes, this method will break.
    – mcw
    Aug 21, 2014 at 20:04
  • 5
    "ActiveXObject" in window returns False in Edge.
    – Neo
    Aug 17, 2015 at 20:26
  • 10
    @Neo Edge is not IE, the OP's question was how to detect IE11
    – mastazi
    Apr 11, 2016 at 2:04
  • 1
    @mastazi yea but in this answer, it is mentioned that ActiveXObject can be used to detect any IE version. It is though debatable that should Edge be called a version of IE or not (Microsoft surely does not want to call it one), but for many of the developers IE has become the synonym for any default Microsoft browser.
    – Neo
    Apr 11, 2016 at 8:12
47

Use MSInputMethodContext as part of a feature detection check. For example:

//Appends true for IE11, false otherwise
window.location.hash = !!window.MSInputMethodContext && !!document.documentMode;

References

6
  • 3
    This seems to me to be more robust. Certainly anything based on user agent is pretty useless.
    – David G
    Jun 18, 2014 at 18:08
  • 1
    That's worked instead of ActiveXObject. Thanks a lot Nov 17, 2014 at 15:46
  • 1
    @tdakhla Updated to filter out IE Edge. Jul 30, 2015 at 3:34
  • Important to note for any of these answers that might seem like they're not working is to check the Emulation settings, I was going to mark this answer as incorrect but then I checked emulation and saw that some intranet compatibility settings were overriding the display mode, once that was taken out of the equation this solution worked fine for me.
    – Shaun
    Aug 23, 2016 at 9:42
  • 2
    Just confirmed #false in non-IE, IE8,9,10, Edge 14,15. #true in IE11 only. Did not test with document mode active. Tested with Browserstack.
    – danjah
    May 22, 2017 at 0:13
15

I've read your answers and made a mix. It seems to work with Windows XP(IE7/IE8) and Windows 7 (IE9/IE10/IE11).

function ie_ver(){  
    var iev=0;
    var ieold = (/MSIE (\d+\.\d+);/.test(navigator.userAgent));
    var trident = !!navigator.userAgent.match(/Trident\/7.0/);
    var rv=navigator.userAgent.indexOf("rv:11.0");

    if (ieold) iev=new Number(RegExp.$1);
    if (navigator.appVersion.indexOf("MSIE 10") != -1) iev=10;
    if (trident&&rv!=-1) iev=11;

    return iev;         
}

Of course if I return 0, means no IE.

13

Get IE Version from the User-Agent

var ie = 0;
try { ie = navigator.userAgent.match( /(MSIE |Trident.*rv[ :])([0-9]+)/ )[ 2 ]; }
catch(e){}

How it works: The user-agent string for all IE versions includes a portion "MSIE space version" or "Trident other-text rv space-or-colon version". Knowing this, we grab the version number from a String.match() regular expression. A try-catch block is used to shorten the code, otherwise we'd need to test the array bounds for non-IE browsers.

Note: The user-agent can be spoofed or omitted, sometimes unintentionally if the user has set their browser to a "compatibility mode". Though this doesn't seem like much of an issue in practice.


Get IE Version without the User-Agent

var d = document, w = window;
var ie = ( !!w.MSInputMethodContext ? 11 : !d.all ? 99 : w.atob ? 10 : 
d.addEventListener ? 9 : d.querySelector ? 8 : w.XMLHttpRequest ? 7 : 
d.compatMode ? 6 : w.attachEvent ? 5 : 1 );

How it works: Each version of IE adds support for additional features not found in previous versions. So we can test for the features in a top-down manner. A ternary sequence is used here for brevity, though if-then and switch statements would work just as well. The variable ie is set to an integer 5-11, or 1 for older, or 99 for newer/non-IE. You can set it to 0 if you just want to test for IE 1-11 exactly.

Note: Object detection may break if your code is run on a page with third-party scripts that add polyfills for things like document.addEventListener. In such situations the user-agent is the best option.


Detect if the Browser is Modern

If you're only interested in whether or not a browser supports most HTML 5 and CSS 3 standards, you can reasonably assume that IE 8 and lower remain the primary problem apps. Testing for window.getComputedStyle will give you a fairly good mix of modern browsers, as well (IE 9, FF 4, Chrome 11, Safari 5, Opera 11.5). IE 9 greatly improves on standards support, but native CSS animation requires IE 10.

var isModernBrowser = ( !document.all || ( document.all && document.addEventListener ) ); 
4
  • the 'Get IE Version from the User-Agent' work nicely! just to be sure, this will show all version including IE11?
    – omer
    Aug 26, 2015 at 13:06
  • 1
    @omer Yes, because it looks for the string "MSIE" or "Trident"; the latter is used by IE 11 and above. So it will work for all future IE versions until MS changes the name of its browser engine. I believe the new Edge browser still uses Trident.
    – Beejor
    Aug 27, 2015 at 18:22
  • This works great, thanks @Beejor! I implemented a simple redirect to another page using your answer: var ie = 0; try { ie = navigator.userAgent.match( /(MSIE |Trident.*rv[ :])([0-9]+)/ )[ 2 ]; } catch(e){} if (ie !== 0) { location.href = "../ie-redirect/redirect.html"; }
    – BernardV
    Mar 15, 2017 at 8:14
  • @BernardV Looks good! A quick tip: if you have access to the server, detecting the user-agent in a script there may work better, since the user wouldn't notice any redirect/flicker, less HTTP requests, etc. But in a pinch doing it with JS works too.
    – Beejor
    Apr 8, 2017 at 17:54
10

Angular JS does this way.

msie = parseInt((/msie (\d+)/.exec(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase()) || [])[1]);
if (isNaN(msie)) {
  msie = parseInt((/trident\/.*; rv:(\d+)/.exec(navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase()) || [])[1]);
}

msie will be positive number if its IE and NaN for other browser like chrome,firefox.

why ?

As of Internet Explorer 11, the user-agent string has changed significantly.

refer this :

msdn #1 msdn #2

0
7

solution :

function GetIEVersion() {
  var sAgent = window.navigator.userAgent;
  var Idx = sAgent.indexOf("MSIE");
  // If IE, return version number.
  if (Idx > 0)
    return parseInt(sAgent.substring(Idx+ 5, sAgent.indexOf(".", Idx)));

  // If IE 11 then look for Updated user agent string.
  else if (!!navigator.userAgent.match(/Trident\/7\./))
    return 11;

  else
    return 0; //It is not IE

}
if ((GetIEVersion() > 0) || (navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase().indexOf('firefox') > -1)){
  alert("This is IE " + GetIEVersion());
}else {
  alert("This no is IE ");
}		

2
  • 1
    My favorite - accounts for IE6-10 and IE11. I added in a check for edge as well May 27, 2016 at 16:49
  • This detects Firefox as This is IE 0
    – KSPR
    Jun 25, 2018 at 11:20
3

I'm using a simpler method:

The navigator global object has a property touchpoints, in Internet Exlorer 11 is called msMaxTouchPoints tho.

So if you look for:

navigator.msMaxTouchPoints !== void 0 

You will find Internet Explorer 11.

1
2
var ua = navigator.userAgent.toString().toLowerCase();
var match = /(trident)(?:.*rv:([\w.]+))?/.exec(ua) ||/(msie) ([\w.]+)/.exec(ua)||['',null,-1];
var rv = match[2];
return rv;
1
  • If you are using a regex to chec you can add the i flag to make it case insensitive, rather than .toLowerCase(). There is also no need for the .toString() method. Nov 24, 2015 at 14:59
2

Try This:

var trident = !!navigator.userAgent.match(/Trident\/7.0/);
var net = !!navigator.userAgent.match(/.NET4.0E/);
var IE11 = trident && net
var IEold = ( navigator.userAgent.match(/MSIE/i) ? true : false );
if(IE11 || IEold){
alert("IE")
}else{
alert("Other")
}
5
  • Wrong code because Acoo browser uses "MSIE" in the useragent. Look at useragentstring.com/pages/Acoo%20Browser
    – User
    Jun 6, 2014 at 15:18
  • WRONG ARGUMENT. I have tested across all IE browsers, even Win8 devices as well. Jun 26, 2014 at 6:56
  • You tested IE11 browser but not Acoo browser and Acoo browser uses "MSIE" in the useragent like i say'd you so the IEold also detects Acoo browser as IEold (The old version of IE) and i'm sure that Acoo browser uses "MSIE" in the useragent because i've did navigator.userAgent on a javascript test site with Acoo browser (Test site: w3schools.com)
    – User
    Jun 26, 2014 at 11:30
  • Can you please give a better solution for this? Jul 2, 2014 at 6:31
  • U can use !navigator.userAgent.match("Acoo Browser;") && navigator.userAgent.match(/MSIE/i) ? true : false but that does not always work because acoo browser does not always have "Acoo Browser;" in its useragent but actually u don't need to care about that acoo browser has "MSIE" in its useragent because acoo browser is almost thesame.
    – User
    Jul 3, 2014 at 10:39
1

This appears to be a better method. "indexOf" returns -1 if nothing is matched. It doesn't overwrite existing classes on the body, just adds them.

// add a class on the body ie IE 10/11
var uA = navigator.userAgent;
if(uA.indexOf('Trident') != -1 && uA.indexOf('rv:11') != -1){
    document.body.className = document.body.className+' ie11';
}
if(uA.indexOf('Trident') != -1 && uA.indexOf('MSIE 10.0') != -1){
    document.body.className = document.body.className+' ie10';
}
0

Detect most browsers with this:

var getBrowser = function(){
  var navigatorObj = navigator.appName,
      userAgentObj = navigator.userAgent,
      matchVersion;
  var match = userAgentObj.match(/(opera|chrome|safari|firefox|msie|trident)\/?\s*(\.?\d+(\.\d+)*)/i);
  if( match && (matchVersion = userAgentObj.match(/version\/([\.\d]+)/i)) !== null) match[2] = matchVersion[1];
  //mobile
  if (navigator.userAgent.match(/iPhone|Android|webOS|iPad/i)) {
    return match ? [match[1], match[2], mobile] : [navigatorObj, navigator.appVersion, mobile];
  }
  // web browser
  return match ? [match[1], match[2]] : [navigatorObj, navigator.appVersion, '-?'];
};

https://gist.github.com/earlonrails/5266945

0

I used the onscroll event at the element with the scrollbar. When triggered in IE, I added the following validation:

onscroll="if (document.activeElement==this) ignoreHideOptions()"
0

Only for IE Browser:

var ie = 'NotIE'; //IE5-11, Edge+
    if( !!document.compatMode ) {
        if( !("ActiveXObject" in window) ) ) ie = 'EDGE';
        if( !!document.uniqueID){
            if('ActiveXObject' in window && !window.createPopup ){ ie = 11; }
            else if(!!document.all){
                    if(!!window.atob){ie = 10;}
                    else if(!!document.addEventListener) {ie = 9;}
                    else if(!!document.querySelector){ie = 8;}
                    else if(!!window.XMLHttpRequest){ie = 7;}
                    else if(!!document.compatMode){ie = 6;}
                    else ie = 5;
                }
        }
    }

use alert(ie);

Testing:

var browserVersionExplorer = (function() {
    var ie = '<s>NotIE</s>',
        me = '<s>NotIE</s>';

    if (/msie\s|trident\/|edge\//i.test(window.navigator.userAgent) && !!(document.documentMode || document.uniqueID || window.ActiveXObject || window.MSInputMethodContext)) {
            if (!!window.MSInputMethodContext) {
                ie = !("ActiveXObject" in window) ? 'EDGE' : 11;
            } else if (!!document.uniqueID) {
                if (!!(window.ActiveXObject && document.all)) {
                    if (document.compatMode == "CSS1Compat" && !!window.DOMParser ) {
                        ie = !!window.XMLHttpRequest ? 7 : 6;
                    } else {
                        ie = !!(window.createPopup && document.getElementById) ? parseFloat('5.5') : 5;
                    }
                    if (!!document.documentMode && !!document.querySelector ) {
                        ie = !!(window.atob && window.matchMedia) ? 10 : ( !!document.addEventListener ? 9 : 8);
                    }
                } else ie = !!document.all ? 4 : (!!window.navigator ? 3 : 2);
            }
        }
        
    return ie > 1 ? 'IE ' + ie : ie;
})();

 alert(browserVersionExplorer);

Update 01 Jun 2017

Now we could use something easier and simpler:

var uA = window.navigator.userAgent,
    onlyIEorEdge = /msie\s|trident\/|edge\//i.test(uA) && !!( document.uniqueID || window.MSInputMethodContext),
    checkVersion = (onlyIEorEdge && +(/(edge\/|rv:|msie\s)([\d.]+)/i.exec(uA)[2])) || NaN;
6
  • Where can I find the new standard global objects added to new versions of Edge? I infer Math.acosh is one of those.
    – j4v1
    Aug 12, 2016 at 20:00
  • 1
    @j4v1 Math.acosh Only is Supported in Microsoft Edge (Edge browser). Ref: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/en-en/library/dn858239(v=vs.94).aspx Aug 15, 2016 at 3:59
  • This method stoped working for me. In the past it correctly detected IE11 but now that I have Internet Explorer version 11.1198.14393.0 (Update version 11.0.42 (KB4018271)) running on Windows 10 Enterprise (version 1607, OS Build 14393.1198) Math seems to support the acosh method.
    – Thijs
    May 24, 2017 at 13:20
  • @Thijs In Windows 10 Education with IE11 v 11.1198.14393.0 I tested successfully. You should try another math function according to ES6. May 26, 2017 at 23:02
  • @JamesPeter I've landed upon checking for document.documentMode. This seems to be a more reliable property to check for IE11 or Edge. documentMode exists in IE11 but no longer exists in Edge.
    – Thijs
    May 31, 2017 at 6:56
0

Quite frankly I would say use a library that does what you need (like platform.js for example). At some point things will change and the library will be equipped for those changes and manual parsing using regular expressions will fail.

Thank god IE goes away...

-1

Use DetectOS.js. This is a simple JS definition for popular operating systems and browsers without dependencies:

class DetectOS {
    constructor() {
        this.browser = this.searchString(this.dataBrowser())
        this.version = this.searchVersion(navigator.userAgent) || this.searchVersion(navigator.appVersion)
        this.OS = this.searchString(this.dataOS())
    }

    searchString(data) {
        for (let i = 0; i < data.length; i++) {
            let
                dataString = data[i].string,
                dataProp = data[i].prop
            this.versionSearchString = data[i].versionSearch || data[i].identity
            if (dataString) {
                if (dataString.indexOf(data[i].subString) !== -1) {
                    return data[i].identity
                }
            } else if (dataProp) {
                return data[i].identity
            }
        }
    }

    searchVersion(dataString) {
        let index = dataString.indexOf(this.versionSearchString)
        if (index === -1) return
        return parseFloat(dataString.substring(index+this.versionSearchString.length + 1))
    }

    dataBrowser() {
        return [
            /***************
             * Chrome
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "Chrome",
                identity: "Chrome"
            },
            /***************
             * Safari
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.vendor,
                subString: "Apple",
                identity: "Safari",
                versionSearch: "Version"
            },
            /***************
             * For Older Opera (12.18-)
             ***************/
            {
                prop: window.opera,
                identity: "Opera",
                versionSearch: "Version"
            },
            /***************
             * Internet Explorer 10
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "MSIE",
                identity: "IE10",
                versionSearch: "MSIE"
            },
            /***************
             * Internet Explorer 11
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "Trident",
                identity: "IE11",
                versionSearch: "rv"
            },
            /***************
             * Edge
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "Edge",
                identity: "Edge",
                versionSearch: "Edge"
            },
            /***************
             * Firefox
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "Firefox",
                identity: "Firefox"
            },
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "Gecko",
                identity: "Mozilla",
                versionSearch: "rv"
            },
            /***************
             * For Older Netscapes (4-)
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "Mozilla",
                identity: "Netscape",
                versionSearch: "Mozilla"
            },
            /***************
             * For Newer Netscapes (6+)
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "Netscape",
                identity: "Netscape"
            },
            /***************
             * Other Browsers
             ***************/
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: "OmniWeb",
                versionSearch: "OmniWeb/",
                identity: "OmniWeb"
            },
            {
                string: navigator.vendor,
                subString: "iCab",
                identity: "iCab"
            },
            {
                string: navigator.vendor,
                subString: "KDE",
                identity: "Konqueror"
            },
            {
                string: navigator.vendor,
                subString: "Camino",
                identity: "Camino"
            }
        ]
    }

    dataOS() {
        return [
            {
                string: navigator.platform,
                subString: 'Win',
                identity: 'Windows'
            },
            {
                string: navigator.platform,
                subString: 'Mac',
                identity: 'macOS'
            },
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: 'iPhone',
                identity: 'iOS'
            },
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: 'iPad',
                identity: 'iOS'
            },
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: 'iPod',
                identity: 'iOS'
            },
            {
                string: navigator.userAgent,
                subString: 'Android',
                identity: 'Android'
            },
            {
                string: navigator.platform,
                subString: 'Linux',
                identity: 'Linux'
            }
        ]
    }
}

const Detect = new DetectOS()

console.log("We know your browser – it's " + Detect.browser + " " + Detect.version);
console.log("We know your OS – it's " + Detect.OS);
console.log("We know everything about you.");

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.