Everybody lies — House M.D.
This is a extremely complicated and almost completely useless browser sniffing library. Useless because you shouldn't use browser sniffing. So stop right now and go read something about feature detecting instead. I'm serious. Go away. You'll thank me later.
But why almost completely useless and not completely useless?
Well, there is always an exception to the rule. There is one valid reason to do browser sniffing: to gather intelligence about which browsers are used on your website. My website is html5test.com and I wanted to know which score belongs to which browser. And to do that you need a browser sniffing library.
Why is it extremely complicated?
Because everybody lies. Seriously, there is not a single browser that is completely truthful. Almost all browsers say they are Netscape 5 and almost all WebKit browsers say they are based on Gecko. Even Internet Explorer 11 now no longer claims to be IE at all, but instead an unnamed browser that is like Gecko. And it gets worse. That is why it is complicated.
The main part of this library runs on the server and looks at the headers send by the browser, but it also collects various data from the browser itself. The first thing it looks at is the user-agent header, but there are many more headers that contain clues about the identity of the browser. Once the server finds the identity of the browser, it then looks at the data from the browser itself and check some additional characteristics and tries to determine if the headers where perhaps lying. It then gives you the result.
What kind of information does it give? You get a nice JavaScript object which has information about the browser, rendering engine, os and device. It gives you names and versions and even device manufacturer and model. And WhichBrowser is pretty tenacious. It gives you info that others don't. For example:
JUC (Linux; U; 2.3.6; zh-cn; GT-I8150; 480*800) UCWEB8.7.4.225/145/800
UC Browser 8.7 on a Samsung Galaxy W running Android 2.3.6
Android is never mentioned
Mozilla/5.0 (Series40; Nokia501/10.0.2; Profile/MIDP-2.1 Configuration/CLDC-1.1) Gecko/20100401 S40OviBrowser/3.0.0.0.73
Nokia Xpress 3.0.0 on a Nokia Asha 501 running Nokia Asha Platform
Despite the useragent header claiming to be a Series40 device, we know it's actually running the Asha Platform and we also know that OviBrowser has been renamed to Nokia Xpress.
Opera/9.80 (X11; Linux zvav; U; zh) Presto/2.8.119 Version/11.10
Opera Mini on a Nokia 5230 running Series60 5.0
The useragent header looks like Opera 11.10 on Linux, but we know it's Opera Mini. We can even figure out the real operating system and device model from other headers.
Place the files in a directory on your server. The server should be able to handle PHP and included is a .htaccess
file that instructs the server to also use PHP to parse the detect.js
file. This is required and if your server does not support .htaccess
files you need to find a way to make your server do the same.
Then place the following snippet on your webpage.
<script>
(function(){var p=[],w=window,d=document,e=f=0;p.push('ua='+encodeURIComponent(navigator.userAgent));e|=w.ActiveXObject?1:0;e|=w.opera?2:0;e|=w.chrome?4:0;
e|='getBoxObjectFor' in d || 'mozInnerScreenX' in w?8:0;e|=('WebKitCSSMatrix' in w||'WebKitPoint' in w||'webkitStorageInfo' in w||'webkitURL' in w)?16:0;
e|=(e&16&&({}.toString).toString().indexOf("\n")===-1)?32:0;p.push('e='+e);f|='sandbox' in d.createElement('iframe')?1:0;f|='WebSocket' in w?2:0;
f|=w.Worker?4:0;f|=w.applicationCache?8:0;f|=w.history && history.pushState?16:0;f|=d.documentElement.webkitRequestFullScreen?32:0;f|='FileReader' in w?64:0;
p.push('f='+f);p.push('r='+Math.random().toString(36).substring(7));p.push('w='+screen.width);p.push('h='+screen.height);var s=d.createElement('script');
s.src='http://yourserver/whichbrowser/detect.js?' + p.join('&');d.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(s);})();
</script>
Please make sure you change the URL of the detect.js file to point it to your own server.
The first step is to create a new WhichBrowser
object. This object will contain all the information the library could find about your browser.
For example:
Browsers = new WhichBrowser();
The variable Browsers
now contains an object which you can query for information. There are various ways to access the information.
First of all, you can treat the object as a string to get a human readable identification:
"You are using " + Browsers
// You are using Chrome 27 on Mac OS X 10.8.4
If you need to, you can also explicitly typecast the object to a string
String(Browsers)
('' + Browsers)
Browsers.toString()
Or you can turn the object into JSON:
JSON.stringify(Browsers)
// { "browser": {"name":"Chrome","version":{"value":"27"...
Another possiblity is to query the object:
Browsers.isType('desktop')
// true
Browsers.isType('mobile', 'tablet', 'media')
// false
Browsers.isBrowser('Maxthon', '<', '4.0.5')
// false
Browsers.isOs('iOS', '>=', '5')
// false
Browsers.isEngine('Blink')
// true
You can also access these properties directly:
Browsers.browser
// Chrome 27
Browsers.engine
// Blink
Browsers.os
// Mac OS X 10.8.4
Or access parts of these properties directly:
Browsers.browser.name
// Chrome
Browsers.browser.name + ' ' + Browsers.browser.version
// Chrome 27
Browsers.browser.version.major
// 27
Browsers.browser.version.minor
// 0
Browsers.browser.version.original
// 27.0.1453.110
Browsers.engine.name
// Blink
Finally you can also query versions directly:
Browsers.browser.version.is('>', 26)
// true
Browsers.os.version.is('<', '10.7.4')
// false
After a new WhichBrowser
object is created, it contains a number of properties and functions. All of these properties are guaranteed to be present.
Properties:
browser
an object that contains information about the browser itselfengine
an object that contains information about the rendering engineos
an object that contains information about the operating systemdevice
an object that contains information about the device
Functions:
isType(type [,type [,type [,type]]])
If a single argument is used, the function returns true
if the argument matches the type
propery of device
obejct. It can use multiple arguments in which case the function returns true
if one of the arguments matches. If none of the arguments matches, it returns false
isBrowser(name [, comparison, version])
Is used to query the name
and version
property of the browser
object. The funcion can contain a single argument to a simple comparison based on name
, or three arguments to compare both name
and version
. The first argument always contains the name of the browser. The second arguments is a string that can container either <
, <=
, =
, =>
or >
. The third is an integer, float or string that contains the version. You can use versions like 10
, 10.7
or '10.7.4'
. For more information about how version comparisons are performed, please see the is()
function of the Version
object.
isEngine(name [, comparison, version])
Is used to query the name
and version
property of the engine
object. This function works in exactly the same way as isBrowser
.
isOs(name [, comparison, version])
Is used to query the name
and version
property of the os
object. This function works in exactly the same way as isBrowser
.
The Browser
object is used for the browser
property of the main WhichBrowser
object and contains a number of properties. If a property is not applicable in this situation it will be null.
Properties:
name
a string containing the name of the browserversion
a version object containing information about the version of the browserstock
a boolean, true if the browser is the default browser of the operating system, false otherwisechannel
a string containing the distribution channel, ie. 'Nightly' or 'Next'.mode
a string that can contain the operating mode of the browser, ie. 'proxy'.hidden
a boolean that is true if the browser does not have a name and is the default of the operating system.
The Engine
object is used for the engine
property of the main WhichBrowser
object and contains a number of properties. If a property is not applicable in this situation it will be null.
Properties:
name
a string containing the name of the rendering engineversion
a version object containing information about the version of the rendering engine
The Os
object is used for the os
property of the main WhichBrowser
object and contains a number of properties. If a property is not applicable in this situation it will be null.
Properties:
name
a string containing the name of the operating systemversion
a version object containing information about the version of the operating system
The Device
object is used for the device
property of the main WhichBrowser
object and contains a number of properties. If a property is not applicable in this situation it will be null.
Properties:
type
a string containing the type of the browser.identified
a boolean that is true if the device has been positively identified.manufacturer
a string containing the manufacturer of the device, ie. 'Apple' or 'Samsung'.model
as string containing the model of the device, ie. 'iPhone' or 'Galaxy S4'.
The type
property can contain any value from the following list:
- desktop
- mobile
- tablet
- gaming
- headset
- ereader
- media
- emulator
- television
- monitor
- camera
- signage
- whiteboard
- car
- pos
- bot
The Version
object is used for the version
property of the browser
, engine
and os
object and contains a number of properties and functions. If a property is not applicable in this situation it will be null.
Properties:
original
a string containing the original version number.alias
a string containing an alias for the version number, ie. 'XP' for Windows '5.1'.details
an integer containing the number of digits of the version number that should be printed.major
an integer containing the major version number.minor
an integer containing the minor version number.type
a string containing a type indicator, ie. 'beta' or 'alpha'.
Functions:
is(version)
or is(comparison, version)
Using this function it is easy to compare a version to another version. If you specify only one argument, this function will return if the versions are the same. You can also specify two arguments, in that case the first argument contains the comparison operator, such as <
, <=
, =
, =>
or >
. The second argument is the version you want to compare it to. You can use versions like 10
, 10.7
or '10.7.4'
, but be aware that 10
is not the same as 10.0
. For example if our OS version is 10.7.4
:
Browser.os.version.is('10.7.4')
// true
Browser.os.version.is('10.7')
// true
Browser.os.version.is('10')
// true
Browser.os.version.is('10.0')
// false
Browser.os.version.is('>', '10')
// false
Browser.os.version.is('>', '10.7')
// false
Browser.os.version.is('>', '10.7.3')
// true
Copyright (c) 2013 Niels Leenheer
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.