I am quite confused. I should be able to set
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" />
and IE8 and IE9 should render the page using the latest rendering engine. However, I just tested it, and if Compatibility Mode is turned on elsewhere on our site, it will stay on for our page, even though we should be forcing it not to.
How are you supposed to make sure IE does not use Compatibility Mode (even in an intranet)?
FWIW, I am using the HTML5 DocType declaration (<!doctype html>
).
Here are the first few lines of the page:
<!doctype html>
<!--[if lt IE 7 ]> <html lang="en" class="innerpage no-js ie6"> <![endif]-->
<!--[if IE 7 ]> <html lang="en" class="innerpage no-js ie7"> <![endif]-->
<!--[if IE 8 ]> <html lang="en" class="innerpage no-js ie8"> <![endif]-->
<!--[if (gte IE 9)|!(IE)]><!-->
<html lang="en" class="innerpage no-js">
<!--<![endif]-->
<head>
<meta charset="ISO-8859-1" />
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge" />
EDIT: I just learned that the default setting on IE8 is to use IE7 compatibility mode for intranet sites. Would this override the X-UA-Compatible meta tag?
If you need to override IE's Compatibility View Settings for intranet sites you can do so in the web.config (IIS7) or through the custom HTTP headers in the web site's properties (IIS6) and set X-UA-Compatible there. The meta tag doesn't override IE's intranet setting in Compatibility View Settings, but if you set it at the hosting server it will override the compatibility.
Example for web.config in IIS7:
<system.webServer>
<httpProtocol>
<customHeaders>
<add name="X-UA-Compatible" value="IE=EmulateIE8" />
</customHeaders>
</httpProtocol>
</system.webServer>
Edit: I removed the clear
code from just before the add
; it was an unnecessary oversight from copying and pasting. Good catch, commenters!