>The sentiment is that writing code to work I.E. would be exceptional, whereas now writing code for non-Chrome browsers would be the exceptional case. In fact, developers sometimes only test Chrome. Some popular E2E JavaScript testing frameworks only work with Chrome.
This was once the case with IE, as well. Testing code in non-IE browsers used to be the exceptional case, and a lot of developers only ever tested in IE. There are countless enterprise applications that only work in IE even now, which is most likely the main reason that Microsoft is still keeping IE alive.
This was once the case with IE, as well. Testing code in non-IE browsers used to be the exceptional case, and a lot of developers only ever tested in IE. There are countless enterprise applications that only work in IE even now, which is most likely the main reason that Microsoft is still keeping IE alive.