I’ll cut right to the chase: Chrome Canary currently has a fully-operational implementation of the picture
spec behind a experimental flag. In the words of Yoav, “the important part now is testing”. So:
- Download Canary
- Enable “Experimental Web Platform Features”
- File bugs.
Barring any unexpected opposition, outstanding bugs, last-minute spec changes, or other unforeseen circumstances, Yoav hopes to ship sizes
, unflagged, in Chrome 37 stable — shipping in August. With any luck, on-by-default picture
should follow in Chrome 38 in September.
It’s been a long time coming. Mark your calendars!
On the Firefox front, John Schoenick isn’t too far behind; you can grab work-in-progress builds of his latest, greatest, also fully-functional builds here. John’s code won’t be hitting Firefox Nightly for another week or two.
Wait, what!?
After various chatterings and murmurations, a Use Cases and Requirements for “Element Queries” document appeared in the RICG GitHub the other day.
It is early, early days. But now that picture
is on the home stretch, we find ourselves with some bandwidth to devote to other topics. An organization that’s spent the last three years bridging the gaps between everyday developers, spec editors, and browser vendors — an organization that’s succeeded in taking a major feature from ideation to implementation — seems like a terrible thing to waste, no?
We think so.
If you, like us, find yourself with ideas and/or enthusiasm for element queries, now’s the time to join the conversation on GitHub, in the #respimg room on irc.w3.org, or on that newfangled Discourse board.
See you in a couple of weeks!