479

Is there any relatively easy way to insert a modern browser into a .NET application?

As far as I understand, the WebBrowser control is a wrapper for IE, which wouldn't be a problem except that it looks like it is a very old version of IE, with all that entails in terms of CSS screw-ups, potential security risks (if the rendering engine wasn't patched, can I really expect the zillion buffer overflow problems to be fixed?), and other issues.

I am using Visual Studio C# (express edition - does it make any difference here?)

I would like to integrate a good web browser in my applications. In some, I just use it to handle the user registration process, interface with some of my website's features and other things of that order, but I have another application in mind that will require more err... control.

I need:

  • A browser that can integrate inside a window of my application (not a separate window)
  • A good support for CSS, js and other web technologies, on par with any modern browser
  • Basic browser functions like "navigate", "back", "reload"...
  • Liberal access to the page code and output.

I was thinking about Chrome, since it comes under the BSD license, but I would be just as happy with a recent version of IE.

As much as possible, I would like to keep things simple. The best would be if one could patch the existing WebBrowser control, which does already about 70% of what I need, but I don't think that's possible.

I have found an activeX control for Mozilla (http://www.iol.ie/~locka/mozilla/control.htm) but it looks like it's an old version, so it's not necessarily an improvement.

I am open to suggestions

9
  • 19
    Why do you say that the WebBrowser control uses an old version of IE? It uses the version installed on the user's system, although the IE8 WebBrowser appears to default to IE7 rendering: blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2009/03/10/… Apr 26, 2009 at 9:25
  • 21
    Because it doesn't look that way on my machine. I have IE8 installed but the control shows display issues that I haven't see since IE 5. A very simple login form, 2 fields with a touch of CSS has a garbled display, and some javascript display doesn't work, whereas it displays fine in IE8, Firefox, Chrome, Opera ... so I assumed the rendering engine was an old one. I could be completely wrong about that and perhaps the problem is in fact different from what I thought.
    – Sylverdrag
    Apr 26, 2009 at 9:38
  • 3
    @Sylverdrag: You are wrong. It uses the latest IE on your system. However, I read somewhere that the WebBrowser control has a stronger backwards-compatibility issue than the standalone browser. IE8 can have, for instance, an icon to click to turn on IE7 mode. As part of your program, this is not possible, so the control defaults to the earlier mode for compatability. OTOH, I haven't read how to set it to use "IE8 mode". Apr 27, 2009 at 1:35
  • 59
    Actually, John sanders, you are wrong. It uses ie4 and you need to change a registry value to tell it to use current. Look up "feature mode emulation" and you'll get ur answers, changed recently, used to include keyword native but they changed it, google the keywords I mentioned with "webbrowser control" and u will find msdn article. Sep 30, 2010 at 17:13
  • 9
    By default, a hosted WebBrowser control uses IE7 emulation, unless instructed otherwise with FEATURE_BROWSER_EMULATION. This is documented here: blogs.msdn.com/b/askie/archive/2009/03/23/…
    – noseratio
    Jun 26, 2014 at 7:27

8 Answers 8

194

Checkout CefSharp .Net bindings, a project I started a while back that thankfully got picked up by the community and turned into something wonderful.

The project wraps the Chromium Embedded Framework and has been used in a number of major projects including Rdio's Windows client, Facebook Messenger for Windows and Github for Windows.

It features browser controls for WPF and Winforms and has tons of features and extension points. Being based on Chromium it's blisteringly fast too.

Grab it from NuGet: dotnet add package CefSharp.Wpf or dotnet add package CefSharp.WinForms

Check out examples and give your thoughts/feedback/pull-requests: https://github.com/cefsharp/CefSharp

BSD Licensed

17
  • 3
    I switched to CEfSharp from OWS, and I can assertively say it is of very high quality and active community. Love it. github.com/cefsharp/CefSharp
    – Vin
    Oct 18, 2013 at 18:21
  • 3
    CefSharp is great but be aware that the libraries are faily large (20+ mb last I looked) so they might not be right for a more lightweight project.
    – Skyl3lazer
    Jan 13, 2015 at 19:04
  • 9
    This broke my project. All references broken after installing winforms nuget package.
    – toddmo
    Sep 15, 2017 at 23:28
  • 3
    Same for me. It forces you to change debug platform to be anything other than AnyCPU. Why do I need to change my project setting just to embed a browser? Ridiculous Oct 24, 2020 at 7:03
  • 1
    @AhmedEissa I was experiencing the same issue. I resolved it by using the sample code from the quick start guide: github.com/cefsharp/CefSharp/wiki/Quick-Start i.e. var browser = new ChromiumWebBrowser("www.google.com"); parent.Controls.Add(browser);
    – drewmerk
    Nov 9, 2020 at 21:24
84

Chrome uses (a fork of) Webkit if you didn't know, which is also used by Safari. Here's a few questions that are of the same vein:

The webkit one isn't great as the other answer states, one version no longer works (the google code one) and the Mono one is experimental. It'd be nice if someone made the effort to make a decent .NET wrapper for it but it's not something anyone seems to want to do - which is surprising given it now has support for HTML5 and so many other features that the IE(8) engine lacks.

Update (2014)

There's new dual-licensed project that allows you embed Chrome into your .NET applications called Awesomium. It comes with a .NET api but requires quite a few hacks for rendering (the examples draw the browser window to a buffer, paint the buffer as an image and refresh on a timer).

I think this is the browser used by Origin in Battlefield 3.

Update (2016)

There is now DotnetBrowser, a commercial alternative to Awesomium. It's based off Chromium.

6
  • Thanks. I will have a look at the Gecko wrapper. One thing though, the original answer says "All you need to do is register the Mozilla ActiveX control" and I thought that the Express editions couldn't register additional controls. Am I missing something obvious?
    – Sylverdrag
    Apr 26, 2009 at 13:32
  • 4
    @Syl the express editions can register as many controls as you need. What they won't do is let you install plugins to visual studio. Apr 9, 2010 at 14:01
  • 1
    I have had pretty bad experiences of using WebKit with C# and finally I had to settle on the default web browser component which comes with .NET Dec 10, 2010 at 23:54
  • 1
    As of this date, the above projects are not viable drop-in replacements. Compiler errors galore + instability. Awesomium, is complete and utter trash. Apr 1, 2015 at 15:10
  • "I think this is the browser used by Origin in Battlefield 3." This is incorrect. I know this because I had to force this app to use ie on windows ten because when it defaulted to edge it did not work. This was a while ago, possibly a solved issue. Feb 2, 2016 at 17:43
68

I've been testing alternatives to C# Web browser component for few days now and here is my list:

1. Using newer IE versions 8,9:

Web Browser component is IE7 not IE8? How to change this?

Pros:

  • Not much work required to get it running
  • some HTML5/CSS3 support if IE9, full if IE10

Cons:

  • Target machine must have target IE version installed, IE10 is still in preview on Win7

This doesn't require much work and you can get some HTML5 and CSS3 support although IE9 lacks some of best CSS3 and HTML5 features. But I'm sure you could get IE10 running same way. The problem would be that target system would have to have IE10 installed, and since is still in preview on Windows 7 I would suggest against it.

2. OpenWebKitSharp

OpenWebKitSharp is a .net wrapper for the webkit engine based on the WebKit.NET 0.5 project. WebKit is a layout engine used by Chrome/Safari

Pros:

  • Actively developed
  • HTML5/CSS3 support

Cons:

  • Many features not implemented
  • Doesn't support x64 (App must be built for x86)

OpenWebKit is quite nice although many features are not yet implemented, I experienced few issues using it with visual studio which throws null object reference here and then in design mode, there are some js problems. Everyone using it will almost immediately notice js alert does nothing. Events like mouseup,mousedown... etc. doesn't work, js drag and drop is buggy and so on..

I also had some difficulties installing it since it requires specific version of VC redistributable installed, so after exception I looked at event log, found version of VC and installed it.

3. GeckoFX

Pros:

  • Works on mono
  • Actively developed
  • HTML5/CSS3 support

Cons:

  • D̶o̶e̶s̶n̶'̶t̶ ̶s̶u̶p̶p̶o̶r̶t̶ ̶x̶6̶4̶ ̶(̶A̶p̶p̶ ̶m̶u̶s̶t̶ ̶b̶e̶ ̶b̶u̶i̶l̶t̶ ̶f̶o̶r̶ ̶x̶8̶6̶)̶ - see comments below

GeckoFX is a cross platform Webrowser control for embedding into WinForms Applications. This can be used with .NET on Windows and with mono on Linux. Gecko is a layout engine used by Firefox.

I bumped into few information that GeckoFX is not actively developed which is not true, of course it's always one or two versions behind of Firefox but that is normal, I was really impressed by activity and the control itself. It does everything I needed, but I needed some time to get it running, here's a little tutorial to get it running:

  1. Download GeckoFx-Windows-16.0-0.2, here you can check if newer is available GeckoFX
  2. Add references to two downloaded dll's
  3. Since GeckoFX is wrapper you need XulRunner, go to Version List to see which one you need
  4. Now that we know which version of XulRunner we need, we go to Mozilla XulRunner releases, go to version folder -> runtimes -> xulrunner-(your_version).en-US.win32.zip, in our case xulrunner-16.0.en-US.win32.zip
  5. Unzip everything and copy all files to your bin\Debug (or release if your project is set to release)
  6. Go to visual studio designer of your form, go to toolbox, right click inside -> Choose items -> Browse -> Find downloaded GeckoFX winforms dll file -> OK
  7. Now you should have new control GeckoWebBrowser

If your really must use Chrome, take a look at this product called Awesomium, it's free for non-commercial projects, but license is few thousand dollars for commercial.

7
  • 5
    Very good description of how to get GeckoFx up and running. +1 Jun 9, 2013 at 0:15
  • when building Geckofx-Winforms i needed 4 gtk# libraries (atk-sharp, gdk-sharp, glib-sharp and gtk-sharp), so I had to install Mono first. Sep 27, 2013 at 8:08
  • This answer is spectacular.
    – Mike Cole
    Feb 28, 2014 at 18:43
  • GeckoFx now supports 64 bit, so just go here: bitbucket.org/geckofx and then here: ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/xulrunner/releases and match the runner version up with the latest geckofx version number and you should be good to go
    – whyoz
    Feb 23, 2015 at 17:06
  • 2
    @Wayne if you want to do it right you should create a folder in your project or a speparate project where you would include all files, gecko fx dlls and xul runner files and set them to copy always, then on every build action they would get copied to your build/debug folder or published if you publish from VS, there is also Xpcom.Initialize method that you should call and you can pass it xul runner files path, hope that helps
    – formatc
    Apr 1, 2015 at 16:43
51

I had the same problem, the WebBrowser was using an old version of IE, with some googling I came across the following code that makes a change into registry and makes the WebBrowser to use the lastest IE version possible:

 public enum BrowserEmulationVersion
    {
        Default = 0,
        Version7 = 7000,
        Version8 = 8000,
        Version8Standards = 8888,
        Version9 = 9000,
        Version9Standards = 9999,
        Version10 = 10000,
        Version10Standards = 10001,
        Version11 = 11000,
        Version11Edge = 11001
    }
    public static class WBEmulator
    {
        private const string InternetExplorerRootKey = @"Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer";

        public static int GetInternetExplorerMajorVersion()
        {
            int result;

            result = 0;

            try
            {
                RegistryKey key;

                key = Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey(InternetExplorerRootKey);

                if (key != null)
                {
                    object value;

                    value = key.GetValue("svcVersion", null) ?? key.GetValue("Version", null);

                    if (value != null)
                    {
                        string version;
                        int separator;

                        version = value.ToString();
                        separator = version.IndexOf('.');
                        if (separator != -1)
                        {
                            int.TryParse(version.Substring(0, separator), out result);
                        }
                    }
                }
            }
            catch (SecurityException)
            {
                // The user does not have the permissions required to read from the registry key.
            }
            catch (UnauthorizedAccessException)
            {
                // The user does not have the necessary registry rights.
            }

            return result;
        }
        private const string BrowserEmulationKey = InternetExplorerRootKey + @"\Main\FeatureControl\FEATURE_BROWSER_EMULATION";

        public static BrowserEmulationVersion GetBrowserEmulationVersion()
        {
            BrowserEmulationVersion result;

            result = BrowserEmulationVersion.Default;

            try
            {
                RegistryKey key;

                key = Registry.CurrentUser.OpenSubKey(BrowserEmulationKey, true);
                if (key != null)
                {
                    string programName;
                    object value;

                    programName = Path.GetFileName(Environment.GetCommandLineArgs()[0]);
                    value = key.GetValue(programName, null);

                    if (value != null)
                    {
                        result = (BrowserEmulationVersion)Convert.ToInt32(value);
                    }
                }
            }
            catch (SecurityException)
            {
                // The user does not have the permissions required to read from the registry key.
            }
            catch (UnauthorizedAccessException)
            {
                // The user does not have the necessary registry rights.
            }

            return result;
        }
        public static bool SetBrowserEmulationVersion(BrowserEmulationVersion browserEmulationVersion)
        {
            bool result;

            result = false;

            try
            {
                RegistryKey key;

                key = Registry.CurrentUser.OpenSubKey(BrowserEmulationKey, true);

                if (key != null)
                {
                    string programName;

                    programName = Path.GetFileName(Environment.GetCommandLineArgs()[0]);

                    if (browserEmulationVersion != BrowserEmulationVersion.Default)
                    {
                        // if it's a valid value, update or create the value
                        key.SetValue(programName, (int)browserEmulationVersion, RegistryValueKind.DWord);
                    }
                    else
                    {
                        // otherwise, remove the existing value
                        key.DeleteValue(programName, false);
                    }

                    result = true;
                }
            }
            catch (SecurityException)
            {
                // The user does not have the permissions required to read from the registry key.
            }
            catch (UnauthorizedAccessException)
            {
                // The user does not have the necessary registry rights.
            }

            return result;
        }

        public static bool SetBrowserEmulationVersion()
        {
            int ieVersion;
            BrowserEmulationVersion emulationCode;

            ieVersion = GetInternetExplorerMajorVersion();

            if (ieVersion >= 11)
            {
                emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version11;
            }
            else
            {
                switch (ieVersion)
                {
                    case 10:
                        emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version10;
                        break;
                    case 9:
                        emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version9;
                        break;
                    case 8:
                        emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version8;
                        break;
                    default:
                        emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version7;
                        break;
                }
            }

            return SetBrowserEmulationVersion(emulationCode);
        }
        public static bool IsBrowserEmulationSet()
        {
            return GetBrowserEmulationVersion() != BrowserEmulationVersion.Default;
        }
    } 

You just need to create a class and put this code in it, then run the following code when the program starts:

 if (!WBEmulator.IsBrowserEmulationSet())
            {
                WBEmulator.SetBrowserEmulationVersion();
            }

VB.NET:

Imports Microsoft.Win32
Imports System
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Imports System.IO
Imports System.Linq
Imports System.Security
Imports System.Text
Imports System.Threading.Tasks

Public Enum BrowserEmulationVersion
    [Default] = 0
    Version7 = 7000
    Version8 = 8000
    Version8Standards = 8888
    Version9 = 9000
    Version9Standards = 9999
    Version10 = 10000
    Version10Standards = 10001
    Version11 = 11000
    Version11Edge = 11001
End Enum


Public Class WBEmulator
    Private Const InternetExplorerRootKey As String = "Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer"
    Public Shared Function GetInternetExplorerMajorVersion() As Integer

        Dim result As Integer

        result = 0

        Try
            Dim key As RegistryKey
            key = Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey(InternetExplorerRootKey)
            If key IsNot Nothing Then
                Dim value As Object = If(key.GetValue("svcVersion", Nothing), key.GetValue("Version", Nothing))

                Dim Version As String
                Dim separator As Integer
                Version = value.ToString()
                separator = Version.IndexOf(".")
                If separator <> -1 Then
                    Integer.TryParse(Version.Substring(0, separator), result)
                End If
            End If

        Catch ex As SecurityException
            'The user does Not have the permissions required to read from the registry key.
        Catch ex As UnauthorizedAccessException
            'The user does Not have the necessary registry rights.
        Catch

        End Try
        GetInternetExplorerMajorVersion = result
    End Function
    Private Const BrowserEmulationKey = InternetExplorerRootKey + "\Main\FeatureControl\FEATURE_BROWSER_EMULATION"

    Public Shared Function GetBrowserEmulationVersion() As BrowserEmulationVersion

        Dim result As BrowserEmulationVersion
        result = BrowserEmulationVersion.Default

        Try
            Dim key As RegistryKey = Registry.CurrentUser.OpenSubKey(BrowserEmulationKey, True)
            If key IsNot Nothing Then
                Dim programName As String
                Dim value As Object
                programName = Path.GetFileName(Environment.GetCommandLineArgs()(0))
                value = key.GetValue(programName, Nothing)
                If value IsNot Nothing Then
                    result = CType(Convert.ToInt32(value), BrowserEmulationVersion)
                End If
            End If
        Catch ex As SecurityException
            'The user does Not have the permissions required to read from the registry key.
        Catch ex As UnauthorizedAccessException
            'The user does Not have the necessary registry rights.
        Catch

        End Try

        GetBrowserEmulationVersion = result
    End Function
    Public Shared Function SetBrowserEmulationVersion(BEVersion As BrowserEmulationVersion) As Boolean

        Dim result As Boolean = False

        Try
            Dim key As RegistryKey = Registry.CurrentUser.OpenSubKey(BrowserEmulationKey, True)
            If key IsNot Nothing Then
                Dim programName As String = Path.GetFileName(Environment.GetCommandLineArgs()(0))
                If BEVersion <> BrowserEmulationVersion.Default Then
                    'if it's a valid value, update or create the value
                    key.SetValue(programName, CType(BEVersion, Integer), RegistryValueKind.DWord)
                Else
                    'otherwise, remove the existing value
                    key.DeleteValue(programName, False)
                End If
                result = True
            End If
        Catch ex As SecurityException

            ' The user does Not have the permissions required to read from the registry key.

        Catch ex As UnauthorizedAccessException

            ' The user does Not have the necessary registry rights.

        End Try

        SetBrowserEmulationVersion = result
    End Function


    Public Shared Function SetBrowserEmulationVersion() As Boolean
        Dim ieVersion As Integer
        Dim emulationCode As BrowserEmulationVersion
        ieVersion = GetInternetExplorerMajorVersion()

        If ieVersion >= 11 Then

            emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version11
        Else

            Select Case ieVersion
                Case 10
                    emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version10
                Case 9
                    emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version9
                Case 8
                    emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version8
                Case Else
                    emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version7
            End Select
        End If

        SetBrowserEmulationVersion = SetBrowserEmulationVersion(emulationCode)
    End Function

    Public Shared Function IsBrowserEmulationSet() As Boolean
        IsBrowserEmulationSet = GetBrowserEmulationVersion() <> BrowserEmulationVersion.Default
    End Function
End Class

You may use it like:

If Not WBEmulator.IsBrowserEmulationSet() Then
    WBEmulator.SetBrowserEmulationVersion()
End If
8
  • 1
    Translated over to Python (working on an IronPython application) and it worked perfectly. Thanks!
    – David
    Jul 13, 2016 at 19:30
  • 1
    This is fantastic but is it possible to reset the emulation version? It seems that the version can only be set once in a WinForms application. Whilst it's possible to have it appear to be reset the effect is that, once set, and reset in the registry it is not being re-read with new registry values in a WinForms app.
    – cymorg
    Apr 24, 2019 at 14:40
  • 1
    @DarrenMB as far as I know it uses IE11 Jun 10, 2019 at 8:05
  • 1
    Thank you. Is a good solution and makes the webbrowser control much better.
    – Mark
    Nov 13, 2019 at 14:03
  • 1
    Also, since Edge is the standard Browser in Windows now, I would suggest that the line following "If ieVersion >= 11 Then".... be changed from : emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version11 to emulationCode = BrowserEmulationVersion.Version11Edge Feb 9, 2021 at 7:50
30

UPDATE 2020 JULY

Chromium based WebView 2 is released by the Microsoft. Now you can embed new Chromium Edge browser into a .NET application.

UPDATE 2018 MAY

If you're targeting an application to run on Windows 10 or a later version, then now you can embed Edge browser into your .NET application by using Windows Community Toolkit.

WPF Example:

  1. Install Windows Community Toolkit Nuget Package

    Install-Package Microsoft.Toolkit.Win32.UI.Controls
    
  2. XAML Code

    <Window
        x:Class="WebViewTest.MainWindow"
        xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"
        xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"
        xmlns:WPF="clr-namespace:Microsoft.Toolkit.Win32.UI.Controls.WPF;assembly=Microsoft.Toolkit.Win32.UI.Controls"
        xmlns:d="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/blend/2008"
        xmlns:local="clr-namespace:WebViewTest"
        xmlns:mc="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/markup-compatibility/2006"
        Title="MainWindow"
        Width="800"
        Height="450"
        mc:Ignorable="d">
        <Grid>
            <WPF:WebView x:Name="wvc" />
        </Grid>
    </Window>
    
  3. CS Code:

    public partial class MainWindow : Window
    {
      public MainWindow()
      {
        InitializeComponent();
    
        // You can also use the Source property here or in the WPF designer
        wvc.Navigate(new Uri("https://www.microsoft.com"));
      }
    }
    

WinForms Example:

public partial class Form1 : Form
{
  public Form1()
  {
    InitializeComponent();

    // You can also use the Source property here or in the designer
    webView1.Navigate(new Uri("https://www.microsoft.com"));
  }
}

Please refer to this link for more information.

7
  • I did install the Nuget Package, but it's not working. Still ty.
    – Deniz
    Feb 14, 2020 at 13:04
  • 1
    WebView2 doesn't work with C# at the present state
    – Vlada
    Jul 31, 2020 at 8:11
  • @Viada According to Microsoft Docs you can: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/webview2/…
    – Rahul
    Jul 31, 2020 at 11:59
  • 2
    The WebView control is trash compared with the old WebBrowser. It can't even display pdf files.
    – Xam
    Jul 31, 2020 at 21:49
  • 1
    it doesn't work at all
    – camino
    Dec 26, 2021 at 1:00
28

You can use registry to set IE version for webbrowser control. Go to: HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Main\FeatureControl\FEATURE_BROWSER_EMULATION and add "yourApplicationName.exe" with value of browser_emulation To see value of browser_emulation, refer link: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee330730%28VS.85%29.aspx#browser_emulation

3
  • 12
    And if you're debugging in visual studio, you probably will have to use "yourApplicationName.vshost.exe" Jan 23, 2012 at 16:27
  • 3
    And if you're debugging in visual studio, you probably can just uncheck "Enable the Visual Studio hosting process" on the Debug tab of your project properties. Then you can use your exe name without "vshost" part. May 18, 2014 at 17:38
  • 2
    @golavietnam Can you please help me with this, I tried your instructions and using the instructions on the link you provided but it still doesn't work. When I visit WhatIsMyBrowser.com using the webbrowser control, it tells me i'm using ie11 BUT in ie7 compatibility mode and many websites refuse to work and give me a "please upgrade your browser" message. How can I force webbrowser control to use latest version of ie that is installed (ie11) this way doesn't work, I've tried it a hundred times.
    – jay_t55
    Jun 24, 2014 at 11:48
22

I know this isn't a 'replacement' WebBrowser control, but I was having some awful rendering issues whilst showing a page that was using BootStrap 3+ for layout etc, and then I found a post that suggested I use the following. Apparently, it's specific to IE and tells it to use the latest variation found on the client machine for rendering (so it won't use IE7, which I believe is the default).

So just put:

<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=Edge" />

somewhere in the head part of your document.

Obviously, if it's not your document, this won't help - though I personally consider it to be a security hole if you're reading pages not created by yourself through the WebBrowser control - why not just use a web browser!

7
  • 2
    If you want this to work on a PC running IE7, don't put it somewhere in <head>, put it as the very first child of <head>. It took us a while to figure this out.
    – Sylvain
    May 8, 2014 at 13:29
  • 1
    Sorry I meant IE8 not IE7 in my previous comment. So on IE8, if you don't place the <meta> as the first child of <head>, it will run in compatibility mode, not in edge mode.
    – Sylvain
    May 8, 2014 at 13:57
  • I was using the webbrowser plugin in a winform app and this was a huge help. The page I was hitting was using jquery & angularjs which was choking because it thought the browser was IE7 even though I have IE10 installed.
    – Kywillis
    Jul 15, 2014 at 15:37
  • That work for me! You can also use this to set to a particular version of IE for example: <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=10" /> and always the browser works as 10 (of course you need to have installed the same version or higher Feb 14, 2015 at 7:47
  • This is perfect for my usecase. I want to show nicer html formatted reports. There is lot of CSS content available out there already. This is better approach than embedding chrome/firefox.
    – MD Luffy
    Mar 18, 2015 at 21:10
1

Geckofx and Webkit.net were both promising at first, but they didn't keep up to date with Firefox and Chrome respectively while as Internet Explorer improved, so did the Webbrowser control, though it behaves like IE7 by default regardless of what IE version you have but that can be fixed by going into the registry and change it to IE9 allowing HTML5.

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