Safari
Safari offers most features common to modern web browsers. In addition, some of these features are implemented in distinctive ways, while it also includes some unique to the browser:
- A tabbed browsing interface that allows dragging tabs to reorder them, moving them between windows or creating new windows
- A bookmark management scheme reminiscent of the iTunes jukebox software
- A resizable web-search box in the toolbar. This uses Google on the Mac and either Google or Yahoo! on Windows
- Pop-up ad blocking
- History and bookmark search including search of content in history pages
- As-you-type text search
- Spell-checking for all text entry fields
- Expandable text entry boxes, which can be resized by the user to make entering long texts easier
- Automatic filling in of web forms
- Built-in password management via Keychain
- Functionality for subscribing to and reading web feeds
- Quartz-style font-smoothing, even on Windows
- Integration of Apple's QuickTime multimedia technology
- Support for user-specified style sheets
- The Web Inspector, a DOM Inspector-like utility that lets users and developers browse the Document Object Model of a web page[4]
- A high level of standards compliance through its use of the WebKit framework, including partial, preliminary support for CSS3 and HTML 5
Ask & Answer