In order to detect IE most Javascript libaries do all sort of tricks.
- jQuery seem to add a temporary object into your pages's DOM to detect some features,
- YUI2 does regex on the user agent in its
YAHOO.env.ua = function()(fileyahoo.js)
After reading this answer it came in my mind that it's true, in order to detect simply IE in Javascript we could simply add to our pages:
<!--[if IE]><script type="text/javascript">window['isIE'] = true;</script><![endif]-->
<script type="text/javascript" src="all-your-other-scripts-here.js"></script>
Now the window.isIE variable is set for all our Javascript code, by simply doing:
if(window.isIE)
...
Beside the fact that this might result in being a pain because it has to be added in all pages, are there any issues/considerations I might be unaware of?
FYI: I know it's better to use object detection rather than browser detection, but there are cases where you still have to use browser detection.
document.createElementand thrown away after the function returns (because it's only assigned to a local variable). I just testeddocument.getElementsByTagName('div').lengthafter the function is executed (in both IE and Firefox) and it returns the correct number of divs in my document. – Marcel Korpel Nov 16 '10 at 12:38