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Browser Detection v4.2 by hisorange

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Easy to use package to identify the visitor's browser details and device type. Magic is not involved the results are generated by multiple well tested and developed packages. Supporting every laravel version between 4.0 » 7.0, also tested on every PHP version between 5.6 » 7.3.

How to install


composer require hisorange/browser-detect

Yep, it's ready to be used by You! ^.^

How to use


In Your code just call the Browser facade:

use Browser;

// Determine the user's device type is simple as this:
Browser::isMobile();
Browser::isTablet();
Browser::isDesktop();

// Every wondered if it is a bot who loading Your page?
if (Browser::isBot()) {
    echo 'No need to wonder anymore!';
}

// Check for common vendors.
if (Browser::isFirefox() || Browser::isOpera()) {
    $response .= '<script src="firefox-fix.js"></script>';
}

// Sometime You may want to serve different content based on the OS.
if (Browser::isAndroid()) {
    $response .= '<a>Install our Android App!</a>';
} elseif (Browser::isMac() && Browser::isMobile()) {
    $response .= '<a>Install our iOS App!</a>';
}

Even in Your blade templates:

@mobile
    <p>This is the MOBILE template!</p>
    @include('your-mobile-template')
@endmobile

@tablet
    <p>This is the TABLET template!</p>
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="tablet.css" title="Reduce the page size, load what the user need">
@endtablet

@desktop
    <p>This is the DESKTOP template!</p>
@enddesktop

{-- Every result key is supported --}
@browser('isBot')
    <p>Bots are identified too :)</p>
@endbrowser

Easy peasy, ain't it?

Version support


The following matrix is has been continuously tested by the great and awesome Travis CI!

----- Browser Detect 1.x Browser Detect 2.x Browser Detect 3.x Browser Detect 4.x
Laravel 4.x - -
Laravel 5.x - -
Laravel 6.x - - -
Laravel 7.x - - -
Standalone - - - 4.2+

Since 2013 the package runs tests on every possible PHP / Laravel version matrix.

Standalone mode, without Laravel!


Based on community requests; Now You can use the library without Laravel. Just simply use the Parser class as a static object.

use hisorange\BrowserDetect\Parser as Browser;

if (Browser::isLinux()) {
    // Works as well!
}

Available API calls


Every call on the Browser facade is proxied to a result object, so the following information are available on Your result too, where You can use the [array] syntax to access them.

Call Response Internal Type
Browser::userAgent() Current visitor's HTTP_USER_AGENT string. (string)
Browser::isMobile() Is this a mobile device. (boolean)
Browser::isTablet() Is this a tablet device. (boolean)
Browser::isDesktop() Is this a desktop computer. (boolean)
Browser::isBot() Is this a crawler / bot. (boolean)
Browser related functions
Browser::browserName() Browser's human friendly name like Firefox 3.6, Chrome 42. (string)
Browser::browserFamily() Browser's vendor like Chrome, Firefox, Opera. (string)
Browser::browserVersion() Browser's human friendly version string. (string)
Browser::browserVersionMajor() Browser's semantic major version. (integer)
Browser::browserVersionMinor() Browser's semantic minor version. (integer)
Browser::browserVersionPatch() Browser's semantic patch version. (integer)
Browser::browserEngine() Browser's engine like: Blink, WebKit, Gecko. (string)
Operating system related functions
Browser::platformName() Operating system's human friendly name like Windows XP, Mac 10. (string)
Browser::platformFamily() Operating system's vendor like Linux, Windows, Mac. (string)
Browser::platformVersion() Operating system's human friendly version like XP, Vista, 10. (integer)
Browser::platformVersionMajor() Operating system's semantic major version. (integer)
Browser::platformVersionMinor() Operating system's semantic minor version. (integer)
Browser::platformVersionPatch() Operating system's semantic patch version. (integer)
Operating system extended functions
Browser::isWindows() Is this a windows operating system. (boolean)
Browser::isLinux() Is this a linux based operating system. (boolean)
Browser::isMac() Is this an iOS or Mac based operating system. (boolean)
Browser::isAndroid() Is this an Android operating system. (boolean)
Device related functions
Browser::deviceFamily() Device's vendor like Samsung, Apple, Huawei. (string)
Browser::deviceModel() Device's brand name like iPad, iPhone, Nexus. (string)
Browser::mobileGrade() Device's mobile grade in scale of A,B,C for performance. (string)
Browser vendor related functions
Browser::isChrome() Is this a chrome browser. (boolean)
Browser::isFirefox() Is this a firefox browser. (boolean)
Browser::isOpera() Is this an opera browser. (boolean)
Browser::isSafari() Is this a safari browser. (boolean)
Browser::isIE() Checks if the browser is an some kind of Internet Explorer (or Trident) (boolean)
Browser::isIEVersion() Compares to a given IE version (boolean)
Browser::isEdge() Is this a microsoft edge browser. (boolean)

Configuration, personalization


If You are using Laravel then after installation run the following command:

// Will copy a config file to ~/app/config/browser-detect.php
php artisan vendor:publish

For standalone mode to apply Your custom configuration:

use hisorange\BrowserDetect\Parser;

$browser = new Parser(null, null, [
    'cache' => [
        'interval' => 86400 // This will overide the default configuration.
    ]
]);

$result = $browser->detect();

Since the package aims to be easy to use, there is not much to configure. But You can customize the cache and security values.

Advanced Usage Information


The code is designed to be an easy to use style, so every call You make on the Browser facade will access the result object and get the data for You, but You can parse agents other then the current user's.

// When You call the detect function You will get a result object, from the current user's agent.
$result = Browser::detect();

// If You wana get browser details from a user agent other then the current user call the parse function.
$result = Browser::parse('Opera/9.80 (Windows NT 6.0) Presto/2.12.388 Version/12.14');

Worthy notion! The parser only parsing each user agent string once and then caches it, it uses an inmemory runtime cache for multiple calls in a single page load; And it will use the application's cache to persist the result for a week or so, this should provide You with a sufficient caching mechanism so the detection will cost less than 0.02 millisecond, this was tested with a 80,000 fake visit.

Community


At the time of this writing, the library is getting closer to be 7 year old. I have implemented every user request which was feasable, and running out of ideas for the future. By this statement I am declaring this as the last feature release at version 4.2, from now on I will maintain compatibility with new Laravel and PHP versions, but not planning to do any new features.

Thank You for your support over the years, and worry not, the library is stable, and has all the features You ever need.

Changelog


See the detailed changes in the CHANGELOG file.

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