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How browser works in mobile

What is mobile browser?

The stock android app is Google's own Chrome web browser. Your phone may use another web browser app. Common names for that app include Web, Browser, and Internet. The good news is that all web apps work in a similar way and offer comparable features.

How does a Web browser function?

The primary function of a web browser is to render HTML, the code used to design or "mark up" web-pages. Each time a browser loads a web page, it processes the HTML, which may include text, links, and references to images and other items, such as cascading style sheets and JavaScript functions. The mobile browser usually connects via cellular network, or increasingly via Wireless LAN, using standard HTTP over TCP/IP and displays web pages written in HTML, XHTML Mobile Profile (WAP 2.0), or WML (which evolved from HDML).
WML and HDML are stripped-down formats suitable for transmission across limited bandwidth, and wireless data connection called WAP. In Japan, DoCoMo defined the i-mode service based on i-mode HTML, which is an extension of Compact HTML (C-HTML), a simple subset of HTML. WAP 2.0 specifies XHTML Mobile Profile plus WAP CSS, subsets of the W3C's standard XHTML and CSS with minor mobile extensions. Newer mobile browsers are full-featured Web browsers capable of HTML, CSS, ECMAScript, as well as mobile technologies such as WML, i-mode HTML, or cHTML. To accommodate small screens, they use Post-WIMP interfaces.

Some examples of mobile web browsers:

some of the most frequently used mobile web browsers are as follows.

  1. Google Chrome
  2. Tor browser
  3. Internet explorer
  4. UC Browser
  5. Opera Mini
  6. Firefox
  7. Microsoft edge
  8. Yandex Browser
  9. Epic 
  10. Andriod browser.











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