Discover some of the interesting features that landed in stable and beta web browsers during July 2022.
Stable browser releases
In July, Firefox 103 and Safari 15.6 became stable, and with this we get interoperability on a couple of nice CSS features.
The backdrop-filter
property
Firefox 103 includes the backdrop-filter
property which is used to apply effects such as blurring to the area behind an element. With this value in Firefox, it is now available in all three engines, though Safari requires the -webkit
prefix.
The scroll-snap-stop
property
Firefox also implemented the scroll-snap-stop
property. This property gives you control over whether a scrolling element passes over possible snap positions (with the default value of normal
) or must snap to the first (with the value always
). The scroll-snap-stop
property is now in all three browser engines.
Safari 15.6 was a release mostly dedicated to resolving issues, however it did land one new CSS feature with the :modal
pseudo-class. This feature was also shipped in Firefox 103. The :modal
pseudo-class selects an element when everything outside of that element cannot be interacted with until the element is dismissed. For example, a dialog
element opened with showModal()
.
Beta browser releases
Beta browser versions give you a preview of things that will be in the next stable version of the browser. It's a great time to test new features, or removals, that could impact your site before the world gets that release.
Due to release dates falling just outside the month, the only new beta in June was Firefox 104.
Included in Firefox 104 is the CSS Font Loading API in Web Workers, and the CSS animation-composition
property, that defines the composition operation used when multiple animations affect the same property simultaneously.
The Safari 16 beta mentioned last month is also still ongoing.
These beta features will land in stable browsers soon.
Part of the New to the web series