I don't think emulators are in the picture with browsers. The products you mention probably use actual browser implementations.
I don't think emulators are in the picture with browsers. The products you mention probably use actual browser implementations. Webkit is the open source engine behind Chrome, Safari and numerous other implementations including Adobe AIR so I'd recommend you start there if you're interested.To answer your question about the rules, these are defined by w3.org.
The rules are not defined by w3 that make IE6 render things wonky. What I'm looking for is specific on the actual browser implementations. – Calvin Froedge Jul 14 at 4:09 IE6 takes some 'liberties' with the rules :) they are still the rules all the same – Abdullah Jibaly Jul 14 at 4:14 There's no public 'spec' for how IE6 renders things either.
I'm not sure MS even has one. – Abdullah Jibaly Jul 14 at 4:18.
The way those browser "emulators" are implemented is probably actual web rendering engines that render to a bitmap instead of your screen. Webkit2png will do that for you with the WebKit engine, for other engines, you can do something similar.
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