vote up 1 vote down star
1

What version of javascript does Google Chrome support in relation to Mozilla Firefox? In other words, does Chrome support javascript 1.6, 1.7, or 1.8 from Firefox or some combination of them?

flag

68% accept rate

4 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

Google Chrome supports up to Javascript 1.7:

<script language="javascript1.7">alert(1.7);</script> - Alerts
<script language="javascript1.8">alert(1.8);</script> - Doesn't alert
link|flag
This sounds like the kind of thing that will change over time- are we sure Chrome wont' support 1.8 by the time it leaves beta? But upvote for showing how to check for yourself. – Joel Coehoorn Nov 18 '08 at 21:44
I'm sure it will support it eventually but I don't have any inside knowledge... possibly some Google employees are SO fans and could enlighten us. – Greg Nov 18 '08 at 21:45
1  
@joel: That's too funny. Have you ever seen a google product leave beta? – Chris Lively Nov 18 '08 at 21:45
@Chris, Lol, you're right, I've been using gmail beta for years now. Search has left beta, I think, maybe... – Pim Jager Nov 18 '08 at 23:31
Greg, your test isn't sufficient. Chrome/V8 will run the code in the javascript1.7 section, but it didn't actually test JS 1.7 language features. Those aren't supported in Chrome/V8. – Ben Combee Jul 14 at 13:27
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

Google Chrome uses the V8 javascript engine, which currently states that it implements ECMA-262, 3rd edition. This would imply it supports at least version 1.5.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

As a sidebar, the language attribute of the script tag has been deprecated since the html 4 spec, it's recommended to use type attribute instead.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

While Chrome will execute Javascript marked as "javascript1.7", it does not support JS1.7 features like the "let" scoped variable operator.

This code will run on Firefox 3.5 but not on Chrome using V8:

<script language="javascript" type="application/javascript;version=1.7">
    function foo(){ let a = 4; alert(a); }; foo();
</script>

If you change language to "javascript1.7" and omit the type, it won't run with JS 1.7 features in Firefox 3.5. The type section is necessary.

This seems to be related to a general WebKit bug, https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=23097; it may be that Chrome emulates the Safari behavior even though it uses a different engine.

When asked about supporting JS 1.8 features, the V8 team said they were trying to track the version used in Safari so pages would act the same in both browsers.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.