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Looks like the trend is now clear. The reasons for picking a web framework are lessening. It's more and more viable to use the web platform directly.
Interesting tag... It's indeed been totally forgotten somehow.
Early days but it looks like an interesting use of the t-strings introduced in Python 3.14.
This is indeed a nice trick. There are ways without XSLT, it might even be less painful.
Long but thorough collection of all the nice improvements CSS brought the past few years.
Here is another point of view on the XSLT situation in the WHATWG. Clearly the process needs to be made clearer. I'm not necessarily convinced by everything which is brought forth in this piece, still nice to have different point of views on it.
Or why the XML roots of the web are important to keep in shape. I'm not necessarily in love with how verbose XML is, but it's been a great enabler for interoperability. That's indeed the latter reason which pushed Google to try to get rid of it as much as possible.
Looks like a good resource for modern web development without frameworks.
Avoiding them requires some care when designing the page and CSS.
Nice little resource to better understand some of the tags which appear in <head> and what they're used for.
A good tour of various techniques available on the web for making textured text.
Each has a use, they shouldn't be conflated. It makes for poor user experience and accessibility otherwise.
A nice subset of HTML to ensure better accessibility and reduced complexity.
Nice intro for regular people who want to get into publishing a web site. Good way to bring some democracy back to the web.
Interesting proposals, let's see how far they go. They could bring most of the benefits of htmx and similar straight in HTML.
A good list to design HTML forms. The bar is indeed high and there's value in simplicity.
This is clearly not a great outcome. The browser monoculture probably doesn't help.
A new HTML attribute to keep an eye on. I can expect people to abuse it with hard to debug problems in the frontend if you don't know it is there.
There are differences between attributes on the HTML side and properties on the DOM side. This can quickly get confusing, here is a good reference for it.
This would indeed be a nice path forward for HTML. It's much too dominated by JavaScript for now, having standardized semantic extensibility would be just better.