On Sun, May 8, 2011 at 3:56 PM, Maksim Orlovich <m...@cornell.edu> wrote: > 1) Does this actually fix anything? Did you do any testing?
Well the idea behind it is to have a default string that is as close to what the other browsers are sending as possible in order to avoid getting a different results. You can see the changes being made in the other browsers here: http://blog.chromium.org/2011/03/ua-string-changes-coming-in-chrome-11.html http://hacks.mozilla.org/2010/09/final-user-agent-string-for-firefox-4/ This was all started when I was scanning through Konqueror's wishlist bug reports and run into https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=271720 For me it does not matter what we is really done, but making the strings sent by the two rendering engines in KDE itself as close as possible to what the other browsers are doing makes a whole lot of sense to me. Granted we are a little more pediantic and by default do not send as much information as some of the other browsers might. But still using similar formatting seems a no brainer. > 2) 'like Gecko' was added by Apple guys for a very good reason (UA sniffing) Ok ; so it should be left alone which is what I exactly did. > 3) It would be incorrect to add xhtml accepts to khtml's accept-type. > XHTML parsing is buggy, and isn't really worth prioritizing fixing (on > accounts on basically no-one using it) Ok. This would be left alone too then. Regards, Dawit A.