


Often, a small enhancement to developer tools can make a huge difference in workflow. Look for such extensions in the App Store this fall.Įxtensions for popular third-party frameworks and services aren’t the only exciting use of Web Inspector Extensions.
#Apple safari web browser runs new install#
Now with Safari Web Inspector Extensions, you’ll be able install developer tools extensions from those frameworks and services to make your job developing with them faster and easier.

This can be especially helpful when using powerful third-party frameworks and services - perhaps your team uses React, Angular, Vue, or Ember or maybe a popular test suite or another developer service. Safari 16 brings support for Web Inspector Extensions, so you can enhance Safari’s built-in browser developer tools. Or, if you’d like, you can test Safari 16 by installing the public beta of macOS Ventura, iOS 16, or iPadOS 16. Note that installing Safari 16 beta will replace your existing Safari install with no way to revert to an earlier version. You will need to sign in using a free Apple ID to download. You can try out Safari 16 on macOS Monterey or macOS Big Sur by downloading the Safari 16.0 public beta. We’re excited to announce today the major web technologies shipping in Safari 16 beta. Features from earlier this year include dialog element, lazy loading, inert, :has() pseudo-class, new viewport units, Cascade Layers, focus visible, accent color, appearance, font palettes for color fonts, BroadcastChannel, Web Locks API, File System Access API, enhancements to WebAssembly, support for Display-P3 in canvas, additions to COOP and COEP, improved CSS autocompletion and new CSS variable tooling in Web Inspector, and much, much more. WebKit has had a big year, with over 162 new features and improvements shipping in WebKit browsers - including Safari 15.2, Safari 15.4, and Safari 15.5.
