> On Sep 27, 2019, at 10:08 PM, Emilio Cobos Álvarez <emi...@mozilla.com> wrote:
> 
> And, to be clear, we _can_ fix these compat issues, some way or another.
> 
> One thought is to limit the amount of scroll adjustments without user 
> scrolling or stuff like that, which would prevent the "you get stuck on the 
> page".
> 
> Making anchoring opt-in rather than opt-out is another option, but that 
> defeats most of the purpose of the feature, I guess.
> 
> See also some of the Chromium docs on the compat issues they found[1] and how 
> were they trying to fix them before adding the "layout-affecting-property 
> changed" heuristic, which is what is on the spec right now and what they 
> implement.
> 
> I just think that these are very hacky heuristics that are just going to 
> bring a lot of compat pain and developer confusion.
> 
> It doesn't help that all these things can break or not depending on the speed 
> at which the user scrolls, the amount of scroll events that the user 
> dispatches, the timing of these events relative to other events, etc…


I expressed my main issue with scroll anchoring at the F2F, which is that it’s 
an on-by-default behavior that is making up for bad web authoring, and is 
harmful if only implemented by a subset of browsers.

I would support removing it entirely, or having it be opt-in.

Simon

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