New in Chrome 60
- Paint Timing API allows you to measure time to first paint and time to first contentful paint with the Paint Timings AP.
- The
font-display
allows you to control how fonts are rendered before they're downloaded. - WebAssembly has landed
- And there’s plenty more!
Note: Want the full list of changes? Check out the Chromium source repository change list
I’m Pete LePage. Let’s dive in and see what’s new for developers in Chrome 59!
Paint timings API
When a user navigates to a web page, they're look for some visual feedback to reassure them that everything is working. With the new paint timings API, we can now measure that.
The API exposes two metrics:
- Time to first paint - which marks the point when the browser starts to render something, the first bit of content on the screen.
- Time to first contentful paint - which marks the point when the browser renders the first bit of content from the DOM, text, an image, etc.
Check out Leveraging the Performance Metrics that Most Affect User Experience to learn how you can track these metrics and use them to improve your experience.
CSS font-display
property
Web Fonts give you the ability to incorporate rich typography. But, if the user doesn’t already have the typeface, it needs to be downloaded, potentially making your site appear slow.
Thankfully, most browsers will use a fallback if the font takes too long to
download. The new font-display
property, allows you to control how a
downloadable font renders before it’s fully loaded.
auto
uses whatever font display strategy the user-agent uses.block
gives the font face a short block period and an infinite swap period.swap
gives the font face a zero second block period and an infinite swap period.fallback
gives the font face an extremely small block period and a short swap period.optional
gives the font face an extremely small block period and a zero second swap period.
It’s supported in Chrome 60 and Opera, and is in development on Firefox.
Check out
Controlling Font Performance with font-display
for more information.
WebAssembly
Web Assembly or wasm provides a new way to run code, written in languages like C and C++ on the web, at near native speed.
It provides the speed necessary to build an in-browser video editor or to run a Unity game at a high frame rate utilizing existing standards-based web platform APIs.
You can find more info at webassembly.org, including demos, docs and how to get started.
And more!
- The new Web Budget API enables sites with the Push Notification permission to send a limited number of push messages that trigger background work such as syncing data or dismissing notifications, without the need to show a user-visible notification.
PushSubscription.expirationTime
is now available, notifying sites when and if a subscription will expire.
Note: The Payment Request API was pushed to Chrome 61.
These are just a few of the changes in Chrome 60 for developers.
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I’m Pete LePage, and as soon as Chrome 61 is released, I’ll be right here to tell you -- what’s new in Chrome!