Another good thing about Opera, per quirksmode.org is that is seems to support more of the Html5 spec that the standard Android browser. Safari mobile is further along though but Opera is doing good. Here are the supported inputs:
http://www.quirksmode.org/html5/inputs_mobile.html
The native Android browser doesn't implement any of this and to my frustration, it makes writing mobile web apps more difficult - if I need a date input for example on a form, I have to roll a custom javascript calendar control instead of it just being built right into the browser. I find this odd since Google is such a proponent of the web and you'd think at the very least they would match what Safari mobile offers.
+1 to Opera for really getting dirty with the Html5 spec. Too bad Opera isn't installed by default on Android because I'd love to pull it into my WebView control.
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So if you need to fiddle with its insides, that's a good place to start.
Of course, Opera autocorrects it to Opera:config, but either way should work.
Of course, Opera autocorrects it to Opera:config, but either way should work.
Jack doesn't specify if he's reviewing mobile or mini Opera. Probably mobile because I don't think mini supports Flash.
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