Chromium Blog
News and developments from the open source browser project
Chrome 46 Beta: Flexible animations and improved loading performance
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
The newest Chrome
Beta
channel release includes new CSS animation features, improved performance controls, and a large number of API tweaks.
Unless otherwise noted, changes described below apply to Chrome for Android, Windows, Mac, Linux, and Chrome OS.
Animating objects along author specified paths
Previously, animating objects along an author-specified path required complex javascript code that could block important events like rendering and input. Developers can now
animate any graphical object along an arbitrary path
declaratively as a
CSS property
, allowing simpler code that doesn’t block rendering or input.
Complex animations using CSS
Optimized image loading and service worker instrumentation
Tools like srcset allow developers to serve an optimized image variant in a responsive way, but it can be cumbersome and inefficient to use in practice. Developers can now
negotiate with the server
to download the best image variant for a device using straightforward HTTP request headers. These headers communicate
DPR
,
Viewport-Width
, and the
intended display width
of the resource being fetched to the server.
In addition to improving image loading, developers can now instrument service workers to gather detailed
fetch
and
script
timing. Developers can also
measure
the
startup time
of service workers more accurately.
Other updates in this release
As part of Chrome’s ongoing efforts to ship features from the
ES2015 specification
, Chrome now supports the
spread operator
and
new.target
.
To prevent user annoyance and conserve power, Chrome will
now defer playback of autoplay videos
in background tabs until the first time the tab is foregrounded.
Developers can now
disable Chrome’s default scroll restoration behavior
on history navigation when it interferes with the app’s user experience.
Sites can
specify origins that Chrome should preconnect to
in order to improve performance.
Sites launched from the home screen can now modify the default color of Chrome’s UI by specifying a
theme color
in their
web manifest
instead of a meta tag.
Sites that have been added to the homescreen can now set a
background color
to show while resources load.
Developers can now
specify a URI
for Chrome to report
HTTP Public Key Pinning
violations to
, making man-in-the-middle attacks easier to find.
Events generated by user action can be differentiated from events generated by script using
Event.isTrusted()
, allowing developers to protect against fake clicks.
Developers can now use
CSS.escape()
, eliminating the need for complicated string escape code while handling user generated identifiers.
Modal dialogs are now
blocked by default in sandboxed iframes
, preventing embedded content from abusing APIs like alert.
Sites can now set an
iframe attribute
that allows sandboxed content to launch unrestricted windows.
As part of our continuing policy to
remove powerful APIs on insecure origins
, the Cache API is now
restricted to HTTPS
.
Cache.addAll()
is now supported, removing the need for polyfills enabling bulk interactions with the cache.
The Fetch API now supports
Request.redirect
, allowing more control over redirects.
DOMExceptions
can now be
constructed from scripts
, making polyfills easier to build for specs that require exceptions.
Timer-based polling is no longer necessary
to use WebRTC DataChannels, making them more efficient and convenient.
DevTools now has
better tool tips and custom network profiles
.
Resource Timing extensions
to the Performance interface are now available
without prefixes
.
The
CSS intrinsic sizing values
, which allow boxes to fit their contents, are no longer prefixed.
Request.context
has been
removed
until the
the spec has stabilized
.
Posted by Eric Willigers, Software Engineer and Animations Acrobat
Chrome custom tabs smooth the transition between apps and the web
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Android app developers face a difficult tradeoff when it comes to showing web content in their Android app. Opening links in the browser is familiar for users and easy to implement, but results in a heavy-weight transition between the app and the web. You can get more granular control by building a custom browsing experience on top of Android’s WebView, but at the cost of more technical complexity and an unfamiliar browsing experience for users. A new feature in the most recent version of Chrome called
custom tabs
addresses this tradeoff by allowing an app to customize how Chrome looks and feels, making the transition from app to web content fast and seamless.
Chrome custom tabs allow an app to provide a fast, integrated, and familiar web experience for users. Custom tabs are optimized to load faster than WebViews and traditional methods of launching Chrome. Apps can pre-load pages in the background so they appear to load nearly instantly when the user navigates to them. Apps can also customize the look and feel of Chrome to match their app by changing the toolbar color, adjusting the transition animations, and even adding custom actions to the toolbar so users can perform app-specific actions directly from the custom tab.
Custom tabs benefit from Chrome’s advanced security features, including its multi-process architecture and robust permissions model. They use the same cookie jar as Chrome, allowing a familiar browsing experience while keeping users’ information safe. For example, if a user has signed in to a website in Chrome, they will also be signed in if they visit the same site in a custom tab. Other features that help users browse the web, like saved passwords, autofill, Tap to Search, and Sync, are also available in custom tabs.
Custom tabs are easy for developers to integrate into their app by tweaking a few parameters of their existing
VIEW
intents. Basic integrations require only a few extra lines of code, and a
support library
makes more complex integrations easy to accomplish, too. Since custom tabs is a feature of Chrome, it’s available on any version of Android where recent versions of Chrome are available.
Users will begin to experience custom tabs in the coming weeks
in Feedly, The Guardian, Medium, Player.fm, Skyscanner, Stack Overflow, Tumblr, and Twitter, with more coming soon. To get started integrating custom tabs into your own application, check out the
developer guide
.
Posted by Yusuf Ozuysal, Chief Tab Customizer
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