February 2015 web platform update
Now available in Firefox
Limited availability
-
Array iterators: Arrays are iterable with the
for…of
statement and enumerable with the methodsentries()
,keys()
, andvalues()
. Learn more. -
HTTP/2: The HTTP/2 protocol is a major revision of the HTTP network protocol, providing improved performance and efficiency by using a single TCP connection to send multiple streams of data at once. Learn more.
-
Media capture: The
navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia()
API requests access to devices that produce audio or video streams, such as microphones or video cameras. Learn more. -
scrollIntoView(): The
scrollIntoView()
method scrolls an element's ancestor containers such that the element is visible to the user. Learn more. -
Typed array iterators: Typed arrays are iterable with the
for…of
statement and enumerable with the methodsentries()
,keys()
, andvalues()
. Learn more. -
will-change: The
will-change
CSS property gives hints to the browser about expected changes to an element's scroll position, contents, or style. These hints allow browsers to optimize for upcoming style changes. Learn more.
Now available in Firefox for Android
Limited availability
-
Array iterators: Arrays are iterable with the
for…of
statement and enumerable with the methodsentries()
,keys()
, andvalues()
. Learn more. -
HTTP/2: The HTTP/2 protocol is a major revision of the HTTP network protocol, providing improved performance and efficiency by using a single TCP connection to send multiple streams of data at once. Learn more.
-
Media capture: The
navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia()
API requests access to devices that produce audio or video streams, such as microphones or video cameras. Learn more. -
scrollIntoView(): The
scrollIntoView()
method scrolls an element's ancestor containers such that the element is visible to the user. Learn more. -
Typed array iterators: Typed arrays are iterable with the
for…of
statement and enumerable with the methodsentries()
,keys()
, andvalues()
. Learn more. -
will-change: The
will-change
CSS property gives hints to the browser about expected changes to an element's scroll position, contents, or style. These hints allow browsers to optimize for upcoming style changes. Learn more.