User agent sniffing is the most popular approach for browser detection. Unfortunately, it's not very accessible for a front end development because of multiple reasons. Browser vendors constantly trying to make sniffing not possible. Thus, each browser has their own user agent string format, which is very complex to parse.
There is a much more simple way of achieving the same using browser CSS API, which I'm going to show you. So let's create browser capabilities detection React hook.
We are going to use CSS.supports() static method. It returns a boolean value indicating if the browser supports a given CSS feature, or not. This is javascript analog of @supports at-rule. It works similar to media queries, but with CSS capabilities as a subject.
The most naive approach of calling CSS.supports() during component render cycle will create problems in Server Side Rendering environments, such as Next.js. Because the server side renderer has no access to browser APIs, it just produces a string of code.
import type {FC} from 'react'; const Component: FC = () => { // ? Don't do this! const hasFeature = CSS.supports('your-css-declaration'); // ... }
We will use this simple hook instead. The hook receives a string containing support condition, a CSS rule we are going to validate, e.g. display: flex.
import {useState, useEffect} from 'react'; export const useSupports = (supportCondition: string) => { // Create a state to store declaration check result const [checkResult, setCheckResult] = useState<boolean | undefined>(); useEffect(() => { // Run check as a side effect, on user side only setCheckResult(CSS.supports(supportCondition)); }, [supportCondition]); return checkResult; };
Now we can check for different CSS features support from inside React component. Here is MDN @supports reference
import type {FC} from 'react'; const Component: FC = () => { // Check for native `transform-style: preserve` support const hasNativeTransformSupport = useSupports(' (transform-style: preserve) '); // Check for vendor prefixed `transform-style: preserve` support const hasNativeTransformSupport = useSupports(' (-moz-transform-style: preserve) or (-webkit-transform-style: preserve) '); // ... }
In order to detect user browser, we have to do a little hacking.
Browser hack has nothing to do with law violations. It's just a special CSS declaration or selector which works differently in one of available browsers.
Here is the reference page with various browser hacks. After thorough experimentation on my machine, I've chosen these:
const hacksMapping = { // anything -moz will work, I assume firefox: '-moz-appearance:none', safari: '-webkit-hyphens:none', // tough one because Webkit and Blink are relatives chrome: ' not (-webkit-hyphens:none)) and (not (-moz-appearance:none)) and (list-style-type:"*"' }
And here is our final hook look like:
export const useDetectBrowser = () => { const isFirefox = useSupports(hacksMapping.firefox); const isChrome = useSupports(hacksMapping.chrome); const isSafari = useSupports(hacksMapping.safari); return [ {browser: 'firefox', condition: isFirefox}, {browser: 'chromium based', condition: isChrome}, {browser: 'safari', condition: isSafari}, ].find(({condition}) => condition)?.browser as 'firefox' | 'chromium based' | 'safari' | undefined; };
Here is a full working demo of the hook.
I can't say that this is a bullet-proof, stable approach. Browsers get updated, vendor properties are abandoned or superseded by standard very often. At the same time, I can say this about user agent sniffing. Both ways have similar problems. But CSS.contains() is easier to maintain, and it's much more granular. It welcomes developers to use graceful degradation or progressive enhancement approach and apply their patches granularly.
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