I'd like to point out that navigator.userAgent
isn't very trustworthy, in the sense that it's easily modifiable and might not represent the actual browser viewing the page.
This might be one of the reasons $.browser
was deprecated in the first place.
But for the sake of the question, let's assume browser detection is absolutely needed.
I ran into this very cool snippet by James Padolsey, which actually differentiates between Internet Explorers by using conditional comments.
I've compiled a small piece of code with above snippet and some code from yepnope.js:
(function(window, doc) {
window.detector = window.detector || (function() {
var undef,
docElement = doc.documentElement,
v = 3,
div = document.createElement('div'),
all = div.getElementsByTagName('i'),
isGecko = ( 'MozAppearance' in docElement.style ),
isGeckoLTE18 = isGecko && !! doc.createRange().compareNode,
isOpera = !! ( window.opera && toString.call( window.opera ) == '[object Opera]' ),
isWebkit = ( 'webkitAppearance' in docElement.style ),
isNewerWebkit = isWebkit && 'async' in doc.createElement('script');
while (
div.innerHTML = '<!--[if gt IE ' + (++v) + ']><i></i><![endif]-->',
all[0]
);
return {
isGecko: isGecko,
isGeckoLTE18: isGeckoLTE18,
isGeckoGT18: isGecko && ! isGeckoLTE18,
isOpera: isOpera,
isWebkit: isWebkit,
isNewerWebkit: isWebkit && 'async' in doc.createElement('script'),
isIE: ( v > 4 ),
ieVersion: ( v > 4 ? v : undef )
};
}());
}(window, document));
This differentiates between browsers by their capabilities.
Only problems are, I currently have no way of telling between Safari and Chrome (both Webkit browsers), and between the versions of the Gecko, Webkit and Opera browsers themselves.
I know it's not perfect, but it's a slight improvement over navigator.userAgent
.