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posted by martyb on Tuesday July 02 2019, @04:39PM   Printer-friendly
from the lawns dept.

"Front-end" developer, Pete Lambert, writes about why front-end "web" developers should start to learn HTML. More and more developers are using only pre-made frameworks and quite unfamiliar with the fundmentals of the technology they are using, such as semantic markup. He notes that the continued failure to pay attention to the basics of semantics is slowly breaking what's left of the World Wide Web and suggests reasons to correct that and has some pointers to learning resources.

I’m a ‘frontend of the frontend’ kind of guy. My expertise is in HTML and CSS, so it’s easy for me to wax lyrical about why everybody should learn what I already know (for the record, I don’t know it all - we still have heated debates in the office about what the best way to mark up a certain component might be). This isn’t about ‘my job’s more important than yours. If you’re writing code that renders things in a browser, this is your job.

It’s about usability and accessibility. If you don’t think the semantic structure of your Web page or app is important then you’re essentially saying “Well, it works for me in my browser, ship it”. I don’t think you’d do that with your Javascript and you certainly shouldn’t be doing it with your CSS. Search engines need to read your content, not enjoy your swoopy animations or fancy gradients. Screen reader software needs to read your content. Keyboard users need to read your content. Who knows what technology will come next and how it will consume your app but I’ll bet my bottom Bitcoin it’ll work better if it can easily read, parse and traverse your content. The way these things read your content is that they know it’s actually content and not just strings of text wrapped in meaningless tags. They know what’s a table and how to present it, they know what’s a list and how to present it, they know what’s a button and what’s a checkbox. Make everything from divs and they’re going to have to work bloody hard to figure that out.

Earlier on SN:
How to Build and Host an Energy Efficient Web Site (2018)
Conservative Web Development (2018)
Dodgy Survey Shows 1 in 10 Believe HTML is an STD? (2014)


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  • (Score: 2) by Pino P on Friday July 05 2019, @03:25PM

    by Pino P (4721) on Friday July 05 2019, @03:25PM (#863504) Journal

    perks for subscribing but not putting up a subscription requirement as many comparable publications have. The risk here is that if not enough subscriptions roll in, the site will have to close.

    I don't fully agree, since there are counter-examples like the youtube channels funded via Patreon (youtube pays way to little per view)

    What I wrote in the previous comment applies equally to Patreon with a substitution of terms: "If not enough pledges roll in, the channel will have to close."

    Broadband is also manly used for video / audio and less for text.

    If the Internet is cut back to only hobby sites, you might end up having to go back to dial-up. Would you prefer dial-up?

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

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