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<!DOCTYPE html> | ||
<html lang="en"> | ||
<head> | ||
<meta charset="utf-8"> | ||
<title>A Medium Corporation</title> | ||
</head> | ||
<body> | ||
<main> | ||
<img src="images/zeldman.png"> | ||
<article> | ||
<h1>Of Patterns and Power: Web Standards Then & Now</h1> | ||
<p>IN "<a href="http://v3.danielmall.com/articles/content-display-patterns/">CONTENT Display Patterns</a>" | ||
(which all front-end folk should read), Dan Mall points to | ||
a truth not unlike the one <a href="https://24ways.org/2015/putting-my-patterns-through-their-paces/">Ethan Marcotte shared last month</a> on 24 ways. It is a truth as old as standards-based | ||
design: Construct your markup to properly support your content | ||
(not your design).</p> | ||
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<p>Modular/<a href="http://bradfrost.com/blog/post/atomic-web-design/">atomic design</a> doesn’t change this truth, it just | ||
reinforces its wisdom. <a href="https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/a-guide-to-flexbox/">Flexbox</a> and | ||
<a href="https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/complete-guide-grid/">grid layout</a> don’t change | ||
this truth, they just make it easier to do it better. | ||
<a href="http://html5forwebdesigners.com/design/index.html">HTML5</a> | ||
doesn’t change this truth, it just reminds us that the | ||
separation of structure from style came into existence for a | ||
reason. A reason that hasn’t changed. A reason that cannot | ||
change, because it is the core truth of the web, and is | ||
inextricably bound up with the promise of this medium.</p> | ||
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<p>Separating structure from style and behavior was the web | ||
standards movement’s prime revelation, and each generation | ||
of web designers discovers it anew. This separation is what | ||
makes our content as backward-compatible as it is | ||
forward-compatible (or “<a href="http://futurefriendlyweb.com/">future-friendly</a>,” if you prefer). | ||
It’s the key to re-use. The key to accessibility. The key to | ||
the new kinds of CMS systems we’re just beginning to dream | ||
up. It’s what makes our content as accessible to an ancient | ||
device as it will be to an unimagined future one.</p> | ||
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<p>Every time a leader in our field discovers, as if for the | ||
first time, the genius of this separation between style, | ||
presentation, and behavior, she is validating the | ||
brilliance of web forbears like <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Berners-Lee">Tim Berners-Lee</a>, | ||
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Håkon_Wium_Lie">Håkon Wium Lie</a>, and | ||
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bert_Bos">Bert Bos</a>.</p> | ||
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<p>Every time a Dan or an Ethan (or a <a href="https://sarasoueidan.com/">Sara</a> | ||
or a <a href="http://lea.verou.me/">Lea</a>) writes | ||
a beautiful and insightful article like the two cited | ||
above, they are telling new web designers, and reminding | ||
experienced ones, that this separation of powers | ||
matters.</p> | ||
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<p>And they are plunging a stake into the increasingly | ||
slippery ground beneath us.</p> | ||
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<p>Why is it slippery? Because too many developers and | ||
designers in our amnesiac community have begun to believe | ||
and share bad ideas — ideas, like CSS isn’t needed, HTML | ||
isn’t needed, <a href="http://alistapart.com/article/understandingprogressiveenhancement">progressive enhancement</a> is old-fashioned | ||
and unnecessary, and so on. Ideas that, if followed, | ||
will turn the web back what it was becoming in the late | ||
1990s: a wasteland of walled gardens that said no to | ||
more people than they welcomed. Let that never be so. | ||
We have the power.</p> | ||
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<p>As <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maimonides">Maimonides</a>, were he alive today, would tell us: he | ||
who excludes a single user destroys a universe. Web | ||
standards now and forever.</p> | ||
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<p>Originally published at <a href="http://www.zeldman.com/2016/01/05/13913/">www.zeldman.com</a> on January 5, 2016.</p> | ||
</article> | ||
</main> | ||
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<footer> | ||
<p>Designing and blogging since 1995, <a href="http://www.zeldman.com/">Jeffrey Zeldman</a> | ||
is the publisher of <a href="http://alistapart.com/">A List Apart</a> Magazine and | ||
<a href="http://abookapart.com/">A Book Apart</a>, | ||
co-founder of <a href="http://aneventapart.com/">An Event Apart</a> design conference, and | ||
founder and creative director of | ||
<a href="http://studio.zeldman.com/">studio.zeldman</a>. Follow | ||
him <a href="https://twitter.com/zeldman">@zeldman</a>.</p> | ||
</footer> | ||
</body> | ||
</html> |