Remove any unsupported comments, check for ie supported comments. And place in your head tag. The doc type declaration should be the very 1st line in your HTML. I have in the head mentioned in all the pages. However it is just showing correctly for the home page for all other pages the page is still rendered in scattered mode.
How are we doing? Please help us improve Stack Overflow. Take our short survey. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Collectives on Stack Overflow. Learn more. Ask Question. Asked 10 years, 4 months ago. Active 6 years, 9 months ago. Viewed 87k times. I'm trying to get IE9 to load my page with IE9 standards Improve this question.
Jeff Abhishek Abhishek 3, 11 11 gold badges 36 36 silver badges 51 51 bronze badges. I've tested it and it works even if you have " Display intranet sites in Compatibility View " active. A website must not necessarily look the same in every browser. Plus MS filters are crap. I would recommend to use Modernizer an apply a different solution for IE8.
Force IE9 into Quirks mode? Asked 4 Months ago Answers: 5 Viewed 24 times. I was hoping this was a bug in IE9, but my ticket was turned down as "by design" here is the ticket if you care to look I can't run the entire site in quirks mode, but I need it to happen only on this page.
Is it possible to do either of these things? The following example specifies EmulateIE7 mode. I ended up using an object tag instead of an iframe, it seems to work ok across modern browsers.
Ramy Al Zuhouri. For some strange reason IE8 sets the "compatibility view" for all the intranet sites: So I couldn't see the "compatibility view" button next to my URL bar.
It will save you from headaches :. Only authorized users can answer the question. Please sign in first, or register a free account. There is a simple separate test page for this IE 7 bug. This bug has been observed on Opera, too. Whether the bug is triggered seems to depend on how the content of the form starts, in terms of markup.
This bug appears in both Standards Mode and in Quirks Mode. In IE 8 and IE 9, this bug still exists, in different manifestations. IE 9 does the same but displays the real form without background color and without border. The conclusion is that the old recommendation to use explicit end tags is very sound.
Throughout the history of HTML, various browsers have failed to infer the closing tags properly, and there is probably no end to this madness.
The icon appears on the right of the address URL of the page being visited and it looks like a torn-down sheet of paper. The meaning and use of this icon, as well as the compatibility mode selection in the Page menu of IE 8, is obscure. According to tooltip and help texts, clicking on the icon toggles between compatibility mode and normal mode. However, contrary to what we might expect, this is not at all the same as switching between Quirks Mode and Standards Mode.
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