HTML5test


HTML5test is a web application for evaluating a web browser's accuracy in implementing the web standards HTML5 and Web SQL Database, as well as the WebGL standard.
The test suite was developed by Dutch web programmer Niels Leenheer, and published in March 2010. To test a web browser, the user must visit the home page of the website which is located at html5test.com. The application returns an integer score out of a possible 555 points. The point total has changed multiple times through the evolution of the software; Leenheer introduced the present scoring system as part of a major redesign of the test introduced in November 2013.
HTML5test evaluates the browser's support for Web storage, the W3C Geolocation API, HTML5-specific HTML elements, and other features. It does not evaluate a browser's conformance to other web standards, such as Cascading Style Sheets, ECMAScript, Scalable Vector Graphics, or the Document Object Model. Conformance testing for those standards is within the purview of Acid3, an automated test published by Ian Hickson in 2008. Similarly, Acid3 does not evaluate a browser's HTML5 conformance. The test scope of HTML5test and the test scope of Acid3 are mutually exclusive.
As of July 2020, the maximum score is 555 and Google Chrome scores 535, Falkon 3.1.0 scores 528, Opera 45 scores 518, Mozilla Firefox 68 scores 513, Microsoft Edge 18 scores 492, GNOME Web 3.36 scores 432 and Internet Explorer 11 scores 312.