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The Reason (sorry, I'm wordy, I know)

This might be a tricky, or unusual request but on the website I manage I have a lot of pages containing images stored inside a table. Users put an image there for captions or to just make sure the layout is what they expect. Most of my users are not savvy enough to use DIV's so my tables are never going to go away.

I'm working on making my site responsive but one of the issues I've encountered with these images is that browsers behave differently when an image is in a table and the viewport is resized. Firefox, for example, will not scale an image using max width 100% if it is nested in a table. According to this previous question, this is partly because there is no specification about how to handle an image when nested in an inline element.

The only way I've found to fix this problem is to pull out the image's width/height from the img tag and set the width to be 100% in my CSS. With this in place Firefox consistently scales down images even if they are in table cells. Here's an example of the type of thing I'm trying to fix. Drupal/CKEditor like to put an image's width in a style tag and I need my CSS/JS stuff to fix it.

The Question

I only want my CSS/JS fix to apply to browsers that don't support max width within inline elements. Is there a way to test for this in Modernizr? In the current iteration of my site's JS, I'm simply doing a browser check with Modernizr to see if a user is using firefox and then applying the fix if detected. For those curious, this is how I'm doing it (source for the firefox check).

Modernizr.addTest('firefox', function () {
 return !!navigator.userAgent.match(/firefox/i);
});

jQuery('.firefox #zone-content img').each(function(){
    jQuery(this).removeAttr('width');
    jQuery(this).css('width', '');
});

I'm hoping there is a simple way to rewrite this so I don't have to use browser detection for this but my understanding of the modernizr addTest API is limited. Hopefully someone else has created something similar and can share their knowledge.

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    why don't you set the elements to inline-block, then max-width should work fine cross-browser.
    – Spudley
    May 9, 2013 at 14:51
  • i tried that, it did not work. May 9, 2013 at 15:07
  • Have you tried setting table-layout: fixed on the table?
    – Alex
    May 19, 2013 at 8:33
  • +1 to Spudley's answer – max-width doesn't apply to inline elements, so I'd look into why your use case isn't working with inline-block (or block), rather than trying to detect and then make max-width work with (normal) inlines.
    – Stu Cox
    May 19, 2013 at 10:25

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