Cliff Hirsch wrote:
I'm seeing more and more applications that simply do not work if
JavaScript is turned off. In fact, I'm looking at purchasing a slick
shopping cart that seems great, but I think the lack of progressive
fallback is a show stopper.
Whatever happened to building a robust PHP application and only then
layering on the client-side enhancements? To me this lack of
progressive fall-back is just laziness, arrogance, or the victim of
the usual time pressures. This isn't an opinionated group --- right?!
So I curious to here what others think.
It's probably just market trends. Fewer and fewer people have
Javascript turned off (or so it is perceived), and so they are less and
less of a constituency. At some point a person says, why am I bothering
with this for? Or, how far back to I have to remain compatible? Then a
lot of people say that, and suddenly Javascript is required.
Are there any data sources that measure what browsers people are using
today and what percentage of people turn JS off or don't have it?
Cliff
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--
Kenneth Downs
Secure Data Software, Inc.
www.secdat.com / www.andromeda-project.org
Office: 631-689-7200 Cell: 631-379-0010
::Think you may have a problem with programming? Ask yourself this
::question: do you worry about how to throw away a garbage can?
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