show/hide this revision's text 5 added 2 characters in body

For VML detection, here's what google maps does (search for "function Xd"):

function supportsVml() {
    if (typeof supportsVml.supported == "undefined") {
        var a = document.body.appendChild(document.createElement('div'));
        a.innerHTML = '<v:shape id="vml_flag1" adj="1" />';
        var b = a.firstChild;
        b.style.behavior = "url(#default#VML)";
        supportsVml.supported = b ? typeof b.adj == "object": true;
        a.parentNode.removeChild(a);
    }
    return supportsVml.supported
}

I see what you mean about FF: it allows arbitrary elements to be created, including vml elements (<v:shape>). It looks like it's the test for the adjacency attribute that can determine if the created element is truly interpreted as a vml object.

For SVG detection, this works nicely:

function supportsSvg() {
    return document.implementation.hasFeature("http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG11/feature#SVG"document.implementation.hasFeature("http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG11/feature#Shape", "1.1")
1.0")
}
show/hide this revision's text 4 added 3 characters in body

For VML detection, here's what google maps does (search for "function Xd"):

function supportsVml() {
    if (typeof supportsVml.supported == "undefined") {
        var a = document.body.appendChild(document.createElement('div'));
        a.innerHTML = '<v:shape id="vml_flag1" adj="1" />';
        var b = a.firstChild;
        b.style.behavior = "url(#default#VML)";
        supportsVml.supported = b ? typeof b.adj == "object": true;
        a.parentNode.removeChild(a);
    }
    return supportsVml.supported
}

I see what you mean about FF: it allows arbitrary elements to be created, including vml elements (<v:shape>). It looks like it's the test for the adjacency attribute that determines can determine if the created element is truly interpreted as a vml object.

For SVG detection, this works nicely:

function supportsSvg() {
    return document.implementation.hasFeature("http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG11/feature#SVG", "1.1")
}
show/hide this revision's text 3 Elab

For VML detection, here's what google maps does (search for "function Xd"):

function supportsVml() {
    if (typeof supportsVml.supported == "undefined") {
        var a = document.body.appendChild(document.createElement('div'));
        a.innerHTML = '<v:shape id="vml_flag1" adj="1" />';
        var b = a.firstChild;
        b.style.behavior = "url(#default#VML)";
        supportsVml.supported = b ? typeof b.adj == "object": true;
        a.parentNode.removeChild(a);
    }
    return supportsVml.supported
}

I see what you mean about FF: it allows arbitrary elements to be created, including vml elements (<v:shape>). It looks like it's the test for the adjacency attribute that determines if the created element is truly interpreted as a vml object.

For SVG detection, this works nicely:

function supportsSvg() {
    return document.implementation.hasFeature("http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG11/feature#SVG", "1.1")
}
show/hide this revision's text 2 Add svg check to answer both parts of the question
show/hide this revision's text 1