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Is it still bad practice to create a website that relies on javascript?
I know it used to be, but nowadays most browsers support them... Why or why not should I worry about this?
Spending extra effort to make a site work without Javascript is becoming increasingly ridiculous when so much of the web breaks when you disable it.
For example, did you know that you can't install Google Chrome when you're using a browser without Javascript? Their "accept and install" button requires Javascript.
You should, of course, use the <noscript> tag to display appropriate messages to the user that may have accidentally disabled Javascript in their browser. Google places this text at the top of their page via the noscript tag:
You need a JavaScript-capable browser
to download this software. Click here for instructions on how to enable
JavaScript in your browser.
I admit this was a surprising case when I discovered it, because well... it's Google. And millions of people have downloaded Chrome. But I think it illustrates the point that a site dependent on Javascript is a pretty normal thing today.
Depends on the target audience, but more importantly how you're using JavaScript.
Using it for effects that don't interfere with any actual functionality is usually fine.
If you want to target a broad audience and your website is non-functional without JavaScript, then you may want to reconsider.
No modern, interesting, web application does not use JavaScript. A content-only site might not use it, and any web site should warn the user that JavaScript is required, but it's been a long time since "no JavaScript" made any sense.
Search engines still do not evaluate JavaScript. If you want your site to be indexed, all the content needs to be accessible without JavaScript.
It's not bad practice to rely on JavaScript, but I would say it's bad practice to assume without checking that JavaScript is enabled.
At the very least your website should give the user a nice error if JavaScript is disabled. Ideally, at least the basic functionality (such as text content and images) should still work and JavaScript should enhance it: see Unobtrusive JavaScript.
You should know your target audience of course. If you know that everybody will be using a certain browser for something like an intranet application then you can probably assume that they will be using JavaScript.
If you are writing an application for the general public, then I would take extra effort to write it such that it works without JavaScript. Then use JavaScript to enhance the existing solution. It takes extra effort, but you can make an application both accessible and interesting if you try.
EDIT: Also thought I would add since I haven't seen any references to it, but building a website that relies on straight JavaScript (and not a common JavaScript library like JQuery) would be unwise. JQuery helps you address some of the browser differences that made JavaScript so problematic a few years back (not to mention doing more with less code).
The new HTML5 standard, which many browsers are already starting to support, relies pretty heavily on scripting for much of its new APIs. So no, it is not bad practice to use scripting, it is encouraged.
If you're making a website that's available on the internet and whose audience is more than just people you know, then it's absolutely not OK to build it so that it doesn't work without JavaScript. Many people and corporations choose to browse the web with JavaScript turned off, for many reasons, and you need to remember that the majority of users are not developers and do not browse the web in the same way with the same tools as you.
Use progressive enhancement: start by creating and testing all the core functions of your site with simple HTML. When that works, add JavaScript functionality.
Developing a highly interactive web application is a different matter. For that, it's not unreasonable to insist on your users using particular browsers with JavaScript enabled.
If I decided to use some javascipt in my website like
$('#body').load(URL);
or
$.get(URL, {param:value}, function(){ ... });
or
window.title = 'TEXT';
Is it good for SEO? Or am I recommended to use pure PHP for data on the page for SEO purposes?
The question of if javascript is good for SEO or not is missing the point. We should pretty much assume that any content which is only available by javascript will not be crawled by the search engines. Google at least claims to be able to crawl some javascript only content but is fairly tight lipped about what exactly they can crawl. Other search engines probably don't crawl it and it's certainly the case that not all do. So assume it doesn't get crawled.
That doesn't mean it's bad for SEO.
If the content will contribute to your SEO, then it's bad for SEO. If the content is neutral to SEO, then it's neutral for SEO. So the answer to your question really depends on the nature of your content. If the content is part of your SEO campaign, then stick with server-side HTML generation be it PHP or some other method. Otherwise the question of SEO has no bearing on the decision to to use javascript or not. Accessibility would be another thing to take into account. Javascript only content is terrible for that.
The larger search engines can/do render limited amounts of javascript. However, for SEO purposes your best bet is rendering the content via HTML rather than javascript. A good rule of thumb is to utilize HTML for content/expressing limited content structure (e.g. paragraph type text = p, lists = ul/ol, headings = h1/h2/h3, etc...), CSS for presentation, and JS for client side programming. With that being said, always ensure a good user experience first. If you can do the above while providing a great user experience, great! If you can't, users first. Its likely you can keep both users and bots happy 95% of the time if you take the time to do so.
Further reading (sorry, I can only post one link as a new user):
Matt Cutts Interview (Check out #26 on Google Javascript Rendering)
A spider's view of Web 2.0
EDIT Added that for "a new user" ;) ~ drachenstern
I think first you should consider what SEO means. It means "Search Engine Optimization" ... how does a search engine get data in the first place for it to be optimized?
It does a GET on the page and whatever data is returned in the GET is processed. No JS engine. No POST data. So you should be optimizing for whatever data is returned on a GET.
Additionally, you tagged this with PHP, but the question has nothing to do with PHP.
Have you seen any of the questions on this list?
https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=javascript+seo
No Sir, Google does not translate flash and java script properly so it may not crawl those area using java script or flash content. I suggest you should keep your website simple but if it is necessary to keep flashy/java script content then you should keep a text base backup.
The first thing you should be asking is not what is good for SEO, but what is good for users. For users, loading data with JavaScript will give them an interactive page, where they can start seeing the page immediately while it is still loading and where the page can update without having to reload it.
From Google's Webmaster Guidelines and article on Cloaking, you should not assume that crawlers can understand JavaScript. This does not mean that you should not use JavaScript on your website, but rather that you should provide the textual equivalent in noscript tags, for use both by users with JavaScript disabled
as well as for crawlers, bearing in mind that the content of these noscript tags should be roughly equivalent to what was shown with JavaScript enabled; showing different content to users and to search engines is called "cloaking" and is frowned upon to say the least.
Google doesn't (yet) execute a page's Javascript (JS). So if your JS replaces/creates content on a page then the content would normally be invisible to the crawlers (not good).
But, the Googlers have implemented a url hack that enables your server to create pages (from the server, not from JS), with all the different varients of your JS page's content.
This solves the SEO problem of Ajax powered pages. At least for Google searches...
See Crawable Ajax
Javascript or any scripts for that matter should never be used to house your sites content, ever! The entire web is driven by HTML and CSS, and in rare cases XML languages, everything else is a headache when it comes to SEO. Ask yourself this question, what exactly is SEO and what is it that search engines are indexing? Javascript and all programming/scripting languages are proprietary, this means that they are NOT standards as defined by the W3C, which means they are essentially worthless when it comes to indexing content. On the other hand, HTML, CSS, and XML are real standards developed for the web! It's ok to use scripts to add additional functionality to your pages, embed apps like social networking plugins, etc, but you should never use them to hold your websites HTML, CSS, or actual content ever, for any reason. Here's a link to a good article that will explain why you should be using HTML and CSS, and not a million scripts, optimizing webpages using proper html markup. Scripts cause other problems besides code that is hard for search engines to decipher. For one, they are harder for browsers to process, causing pages to load much slower than "static" pages made with HTML and CSS would. Pages made with PHP tend to create "dynamic" URL's that users and search engines cannot read. This is why Google recommends people who use jsp or PHP for their webpages include a sitemap, otherwise your links will never be found and might as well not exist. Stick to the conventions! Lets face it, we have standards for a reason. If every electronic component in your home required had a different type of plug that required a special socked, and all those devices had differing voltage and amperage requirements, what would happen? You would essentially burn down your house! And, you'd be spending 5 hours a day at the hardware store looking for those special adapters to fit your wall sockets with. If you plan on designing a website, use scripts for embedding apps or connecting with a database only, and use HTML and CSS to build "static" webpages. Also, use text links, as they are both human and search engine readable, and easy to index and make sense of. Never use scripts for your links. Programming and scripting can be fun, but not on the internet its not.
Search engines index HTML, CSS, and content (multi-media, graphics, videos, text, thats it!) everything else is pointless and annoying to both users and search engines alike. For best results use XML and design a custom language.
Google can crawl, index and rank javascript generated content.
But... it uses an old Chrome version (42) with an old javascript render engine.
The consequence is that your javascript code needs to work in older browsers and older chrome versions (older than 42). So no fancy ES6 functions, you need to use polyfills or use Babel for example.
Although you can do a lot with javascript (like click events or inject your mobile menu), it's recommended to still use a-href instead of a button with a javascript event and then using a function to get to a new page.
You can check the mobile testing tool from Google: https://search.google.com/test/mobile-friendly and check the errors/warnings/logs. If the rendered output looks like intended, Google will see your content.
In search console you can also ask to index the page. Sometimes the javascript crawler is first, sometimes the 'classic' crawler.
Doublecheck it some days afterward by googling a sentence or paragraph from your page.
There's no answer about if it's better or not. Content is content and Google should rank your website, SPA, PWA, AMP site, PDF document, online Doc, wikipage, and so on based on their content, not on the underlying technique.
If you are familiar with JavaScript, give it a go.
Regards, Peter
I have been developing web applications for a few years now. One of the issues that I face is having to develop web apps where javascript is not enabled or not available. I know this was a issue a few year back but am curious to know what other web designers, developers think about this issue? Is that still an issue?
The reason I am asking this is because it seems to me we are just catering for scenarios that is very unlikely to happen now a days. This is especially with regards to public facing websites and web applications? Am I right in my assessment? I am keen to know the experiences and any learnings of other web developers and designers
Thanks.
Even today, some people (including myself) have JS turned off by default. Professionally built sites either warn about disabled features or work without JS (via full page reloads).
I would recommend you try to ensure the basic functionality of your site is available without javascript.
If you work this way, you'll end up with a site that works even if you, or another dev, allows imperfect JS into the production site - a serious JS error won't necessarily be a total show-stopper.
Also: AJAX, effects and other fluff can take aaaaaaages to debug. Users don't mind simple. You should aim for simple, and slowly add bells and whistles, user testing as you add, to avoid creating an AJAXeffectsFluffy crap heap that is confusing and buggy...
+1 for Progressive Enhancement. This is where you have basic, non-flashy, functionality with straight-forward HTML/CSS then get JavaScript code to either supplement or replace that functionality with it's own.
For instance, if you have paging navigation on the page that consists of simple hyperlinks for page 1, page 2 etc eg.
<div class="paging">
<ul>
<li>1
<li>2
<li>3
</ul>
</div>
Then you'd have JavaScript functionality that looks for your div.paging element and completely replaces it with something more elegant, eg (in pseudo code)
$('div.paging').each(function()
{
$(this).find('ul').remove();
$(this).append(renderAdvancedPaging());
});
As for what it could be replaced by, it could be Google Images style infinite scroll (yes I know Bing had it first), or Twitter's approach of having a big next page button at the bottom that dynamically appends the next set of results (have a look http://twitter.com/codinghorror - scroll down and click 'More').
The benefits of this 'Progressive Enhancement' approach are:
Works for people who have disabled JavaScript, this includes savvy users, and users working in heavily locked down corporate intranets.
Accessibility: blind users with screen readers can still use your site.
Search engines, which won't execute any JavaScript on your page, can still follow your paging links and index additional content of those pages.
The last point should be the most important if you care about SEO.
There are times, however, when you can reasonably ignore Progressive Enhancement and build a website which relies on JavaScript and won't work without it. You'd typically do this for advanced 'Web Applications' or mobile optimised web-apps for instance, think Google Maps, a calendar app, a HTML5 drawing app that uses the <canvas> element, an HTML5 powered game etc. My rule, anything 'Content Based' (blogging site, news site, e-commerce shop etc.) should apply Progressive Enhancement, whereas anything 'Application-y' could just get away with mandating JavaScript.
Ultimately, it comes down to what you're building and whether the Progressive Enhancement route is right for you.
Stats for number of people with JavaScript disabled is hard to come by (some here but it's from 2008, also this StackOverflow post from 2008), but I think it's becoming increasingly less likely to have script disabled because of the increasing number of RIA apps and HTML5 apps that rely on JavaScript (Google Docs, Maps etc.). Also take into account the increasing number of Mobile Internet Devices (iPhones, iPads etc.) that don't allow you to disable JavaScript.
Progressive enhancement! I nearly always browse with JS disabled after spending way too long being annoyed by over AJAXd websites, so always start from simple page load forms etc before adding JS functionality.
JS frameworks like jQuery, mootools etc are getting more and more popular as pretty much anyone can produce a "shiny" website with animations. But I think that the more people start to use the tools, the less willing any regular browser will be to enable JS.
There are some who think you need to also take care of people who have CSS turned off. All this can drive you crazy, accounting for all the "what ifs" of the web world. Those who turn off javascript know what they are in for and are never surprised to find a site that doesn't work because of it. If they know enough to turn it off then they know enough to turn it back on when they need it.
I think it was Tim Berners-Lee who once said the web was always meant to be scriptable. Scripting hooks are built into HTML and all browsers work with it. Almost everyone has it turned on and they should. Use it to your advantage.
How important is it to gracefully degrade or inversely Progressively Enhance the UI experiance? I mean am I going to lose a LOT of business if I don't? Do you practice this concept? Are there any web 1.0 users still left out there?
Please could you also include if you practice this personally and how much time you've spent relative to the entire project. I realize every project is different, I want to get a sense of how much time as a general rule I should be allocating toward this goal.
EDIT
Firstly, i'm looking for guidance around how much time I should be devoting to making my applications run without javascript.
Secondly, the BS term "web 1.0" (...lol... I don't really like it either) works because we all understand that as the iteration before ajax and all its goodness.
Thirdly, the kind of applications I'm describing are the ones we are all building, not Facebook, not Twitter (unless you're from Facebook or Twitter) but service or utitlity programs like a web calendar, or an online todo list or [INSERT YOUR APP HERE].
Progressive enhancement is more a mindset than a particular task that you need to allocate time to. If you're doing it right (and if it's important to you), you should be enhancing the user experience with JavaScript, but not relying on it.
For example, a link will point to a new page, but with JavaScript you'll disable the link and load new content into the current page with Ajax. Start off without JavaScript and progressive enhancement will follow naturally.
Progressive enhancement is not only smart but it is faster and easier to develop.
And at each stage, you almost always have a working fall-back.
Here's what it looks like in a nutshell:
Boss/client approves mock ups.
We code to valid HTML output. At this point, the boss/client can start using the site. Baring any boss/client changes, the HTML is mostly done. The site is usable at this point.
We start tweaking the CSS to make it match the boss/client's graphic expectations. Changes to the HTML are minor, if any.
In parallel, JavaScript is added to do non-critical, but nice, things. (Sort tables, Fancy CSS helping, replace some links with AJAX calls, warn the user -- client-side -- of input problems.)
If any one of these things breaks, the site still works.
Also, little, or usually no, html changes are needed.
First of all, lets not start using bullshit terms like "web 1.0" and "web 2.0" etc, the fact is the web is forever progressing and new websites are starting to use JavaScript to enhance the user experience.
I don't know anyone that doesn't allow their site to gracefully degrade when JavaScript isn't available, this is for the same reason we use semantic markup so screen readers can correctly interpret our websites for users with visual impairment, and whilst the vast majority of your visitors / users won't fall into these categories it's still important to think about the minority.
Will you lose a LOT of business, well that depends on how successful you are now and how badly your site degrades, chances are you probably won't lose any business... but that should not be the measure yo use to decide whether to gracefully degrade a website.
So unless you can come up with a pretty good reason, you should probably use JavaScript for the purposes of progressive enhancement, don't depend too much on it.
:-)
This greatly depends on the nature of your aplication and its data. If it's something that you know will be mostly used via computers, than degrading to non-script version UI wouldn't make any obvious benefit (even loss of money because it will take considerable time to develop). You can always tell people to enable javascript in their browsers (similar to what's done here on Stackoverflow - try disabling script and reload the page). Your app/site should display at least something when there's no Javascript posibility.
But if your application has simple data to display and users should access it frequently wherever they are, than degrading to lesser browsers (without script engines like Opera Mini) is a must. Creating a separate UI will less functionality, but keeping everything in that users need to access is probably your best option. UIs like separate iPhone applications for example...
JavaScript is disabled by a small proportion of web users, but when you start to talk big volumes this can make a difference. For example for 1 million visitors, you can expect more than 10,000 not to be able to user your site.
You should decide how much lost business is worth the additional cost of having a non-JavaScript version of your site.
You can have an approach where the entire site may not work without JavaScript but that some of the core features are there.
It's fall of 2008, and I still hear developers say that you should not design a site that requires JavaScript.
I understand that you should develop sites that degrade gracefully when JS is not present/on. But at what point do you not include funcitonality that can only be powered by JS?
I guess the question comes down to demographics. Are there numbers out there of how many folks are browsing without JS?
Just as long as you're aware of the accessibility limitations you might be introducing, ie for users of screen-reading software, etc.
It's one thing to exclude people because they choose to turn off JS or use a browser which doesn't support it, it's entirely another to exclude them because of a disability.
Two simple questions to help you decide...
Does using javascript provide some
core functionality of your site?
Are you prepared to limit your
potential users to those who have
JS? (ie. Most people)
If you answer yes to both of those, go for it!
Websites are moving (have moved?) from static pages of information to interactive web applications. Without something like Javascript or Flash, making compelling user interactions is sometimes not possible.
Designing to degrade gracefully is the most that should be done. We are moving/have moved past the point of simple web "sites" to web "applications". The only option besides client side scripting to add round trips to the server.
I think (personal opinion) that the "don't use JavaScript" comes more from a lack of understanding of what JavaScript is/does than any actual market data that shows a significant number of people are browsing without it.
It's reasonable to design sites that use JavaScript but it is not safe to assume that all clients have support for Javascript and therefore it is important that you provide a satisfactory experience even when JavaScript is not available
Search Engines don't support JavaScript. They're also blind and don't support CSS. So my suggestion to you is to make sure that the part of your product that needs to be indexable by search engines works without JavaScript and CSS. After that, it really depends on the needs of your users.
If you have a very limited subset of users, then you can actually query them. But to remember that 10% of the population has some form of impairment ranging from vision issues (low vision, color-blindness, etc.) or motor functions (low hand dexterity). These problems tend to be more prominent in the elderly and the knowingly disabled
If your site will target the general audience of Internet users then please make it degrade gracefully, but if you can't do that, then make a no-JavaScript version (like G-mail has).
I think the days of "content sites only" are gone. What we see now is WWW emerging as the platform of web applications, and the latest developments in the browser front (speeding up JS in particular) ar indication of this.
There can be no yes/no answer to your question - you should decide, where on content site<---->web application continuum your site is and how essential is the experience provided by JavaScript. In my opinion - yes it is acceptable to have web applications which require Javascript to function.
Degrading gracefully is a must. At a minimum, you sure make use of the NOSCRIPT tag in order to inform potential customers first that your site requires javascript, and secondly why you require it.
If it's for flashy menus and presentations that I could honestly care less about then I probably won't bother coming back. If there's a real reason that you're requiring javascript (client-side validation on forms, or a real situation that requires AJAX for performance reasons) then say so and your visitors will respond accordingly.
I install extensions that limit both Javascript and Cookies. Websites that don't prominently state their requirements of both usually don't get a second visit unless there's a real need for it.
You should never design a public site to rely on ANY technology/platform. The user agent may not display colour (think screen readers), display graphics (again, think screen readers or text only browsers such as links), etc.
Design your site for the lowest common denominator and then progressively enhance it to add support for specific technologies.
To answer the question directly: No, you cannot assume your users have Javascript, so your site should work without it. Once it does, enhance it with Javascript.
it's not about browser capability, it's about user control. People who install the noscript plugin for firefox so they don't have to put up with punch-the-monkey garbage ( the same problem that inspired stack overflow) will not allow your web site to do anything non-static until they trust you.
In terms of client software consider users/customers who are using a browser that supports some but not all Javascript. For example, most mobile phone browsers support a bit of Javascript but nothing very complicated. The browsers on devices such as the Playstation 3 are similar.
Then there are browsers such as Opera Mini, which support a lot of Javascript but are operating in an environment where the scripts are running on a server that then sends the results to a mobile device.
You should design websites with Javascript in mind--but not implemented. Consider, build it where every click, every action, performs a round trip to the server. That's the default functionality for older browsers, and those without JS turned on.
Then, after it's all built, and everything is working properly, add in JavaScript which hijacks the link, button and other events, and overlay their standard functionality with the Javascript functionality you're wanting.
Building the application like this means that it will ALWAYS work, which ultimately is what you're wanting.
The received wisdom answer is that you can use JavaScript (or any other technology) providing that it 'degrades gracefully'...
I have experience with disability organisations, so accessibility is important to me. But equally, I'm in the business of building attractive, usable websites, so javascript can be a powerful ally. It's a difficult call, but if you can build a rich, javascript-aided site, without completely alienating non-js vistors, then do so. If not, you will have to look at the context of the site and decide which way to jump.
Regardless, there are no rights and wrongs with this question. However, in some countries, there is a requirement to build 'public' sites to be accessible, so this may be yet another factor in your decision. [In the UK, it is the Disability Discrimination Act.. though to my knowledge, no company has been prosecuted for failure to comply]
JavaScript is great for extending the browser to do things like google maps. But it's a pointy instrument, so use it with care.
My bank web site uses JavaScript for basic navigation between pages. Sigh. As a result, it's not usable from my mobile device.
Make sure you're familiar with the Rule of Least Power when considering JavaScript:
When designing computer systems, one
is often faced with a choice between
using a more or less powerful language
for publishing information, for
expressing constraints, or for solving
some problem. This finding explores
tradeoffs relating the choice of
language to reusability of
information. The "Rule of Least Power"
suggests choosing the least powerful
language suitable for a given purpose.
5% according to these statistics: http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp
As you said, demographics. The web is expanding onto devices that doesn't have very much power, for instance cellphones. If your site is usable without javascript, Opera Mini will likely show your site without any problems.
I think Javascript implementations in most modern browsers have now reached a reasonable level of maturity and there are a bunch of Javascript UI frameworks which let you build very attractive Javascript based web applications using web-services and such (regardless of the back-end server platform).
An example is ExtJS - they have got a very extensive AJAX + UI widget framework which I recently used to build a full fledged internal web-app for a client with an ASP.NET backend (for webservices).
I think it comes down to what you're about to do. Are you writing a web APPLICATION? Then I think you're bound to use javascript and/or something like GWT. Just have a look at all the social sites, and google aplications like gmail. If you're writing a webpage with product descriptions and hardly any interactivity, then you can make the javascript optional.
I agree with the majority of the stackoverflow respondents. JavaScript has matured and offers an "extra" level of functionality to a webpage, especially for forms. Those who turn off cookies and JS have likely been bitten while surfing in dangerous waters. For the corporate power users that pay my way either in B2B or retail sites, JS is a proven and trusty tool. Until something better comes along (and it will) I'm sticking with JS.
There's addon for Firefox called NoScript which have 27,501,701 downloads. If you site won't work without JavaScript most of those guys wouldn't want to use it.
Why you would install that addon? Ever wanted to get rid of the popup on the site that cover the most of the useful text you want to rid? Or disable flash animation? Or be sure that evil site won't steal your cookies?
Some corporate environments won't allow Javascript, by policy or by firewall. It closes the door to one avenue of virus infection.
Whether you think this is a good idea or not, realize that not everyone has full control over their browser and it might not be their choice.
There is a gradient between web sites and web applications. However, you should alway be able to say "we are building a web site" or "we are building a web application".
Web sites should be readable down to plain HTML (no CSS, no images, no JavaScript).
Web applications, of course, could just say "Sorry, JavaScript is needed" (which also assumes CSS for layout). Application should still be able to work without images.
The accessibility issue is the only important technical issue, all other issues can be socially engineered. When one says that javascript reduced accessibility and another says that Web Applications can use javascript, can we take these two together to imply that all blind people are unemployed? There has to be some kind of momentum in making javascript accessible. Maybe a Screenreader object on the javascript side which can detect the presence of a screenreader and then maybe send hints to the screenreader, Screenreaders which can hook onto the browser, and maybe it gets glued together with a screenreader toolbar.
if you want your site viewable by the top 100 companies in the US. I would write without javascript.
Independence from Javascript and graceful degradation are important to an application despite the actual demographics -- because such an application probably has better software design.
The "human user without Javascript" may be purely hypothetical (for example, if you're trying to make money with your product). But designing for that hypothetical user encourages modular software design which will pay off as you continue to develop your app.
Javascript provides functionality. HTML provides data (on the page itself, and via links that point to more data). As a general rule that reaches well beyond browser apps: A well-designed software product will separate data from functionality. All data should be available, and the functionality should be a separate layer that consumes the data.
If your Javascript is creating data at runtime, then it's time to get specific and figure out whether your webpage really is a piece of software (e.g. a mortgage calculator) or whether it's a document containing data (e.g. a list of mortgage interest rates). This should tell you whether it makes sense to rely on Javascript.
As a final note/example, demographics can be misleading. Relatively few humans browse your site without Javascript, but lots of machines (search bots, data miners, screen readers for the disabled, etc.) are browsing your site without Javascript. Again, the distinction between data and functionality are important -- the bots are just making requests and looking for data in the responses. They don't need functionality. But if your user needs to invoke functions just to make your data accessible, the bots are getting no value from your site.
One side point about the screen readers and other accessibility considerations for the disabled. This is an important niche demographic: a mind that navigates data in a human way, but who can only get data from your site in the same way machines get it. By providing data cleanly and semantically on your page, you make it available to the largest possible set of accessibility tools.
Note this doesn't exclude Javascript from consideration. Our mortgage calculator example can still work: accept input from the user, invoke Javascript, and write the output back into the clean semantic data layer of the page. Screen readers can then read it! And if they can't, you're encouraging the development of better screen readers that can.
If you expect your app to work for everyone, you'll need a backup for all your javascript functionality. If it's form validation, you should also check the data on the server before saving it. So the answer is Yes, it's okay, but have a backup. Do not rely on it.
As many people are saying, it's important to consider your user base, but whoever your users are there's a strong possibility that some (stats say 10%) of them will have some sort of disabilities, and screen readers don't like javascript. If you're only adding simple things, a javascript menu or something, then just make it degrade (or don't do it). If the site depends on javascript to work properly, make two versions, one for javascript and one without.
I generally find that anything too javascript heavy is very difficult to make degrade well without just having javascript re-writing the page to a javascript version if the user can take it. Given this, it's well worth writing two pages from square one for complicated stuff.
I would say that there are very very very few web sites that should be running without some support for users without javascript. You'd need to have a very dynamic application that completely didn't make sense as static pages,or you'd need to have a audience you could guarantee were ok with it (like on an office Intranet say).
Well, it depends on your userbase. If you know that people will be using your site from mobile devices, it's good to have unobtrusive JavaScript. However, if you're trying to appeal to a tech-savvy crowd, don't bother with it.
However, if you're appealing to a crowd that may be using screen readers (blind people), I'd highly suggest using WAI-ARIA standards. Dojo's widget system has full support for this, and would be a great and easy way to do it.
Anyway, in most cases, you don't need unobtrusive JavaScript. Most people who have JavaScript disabled are either using a smartphone, using Lynx, or have NoScript installed. It's enabled by default in all the major browsers, so you shouldn't have to worry.
Lastly, it's good to at least have some unobtrusive JavaScript. <noscript> tags are your best friend. For example, one may want to replace a widget that draws rating stars with text. Example using dojo:
<div dojoType="dojox.Rating" stars="5" value="4"></div>
<noscript>4/5</noscript>
It's the 21st century. People not permitting JavaScript need to exit the last millennium, posthaste. It's a mature, widely used, and very useful technology that is one of the foundations of the recent expansion in useful web services.
You should be tying the functionality of your website to your audience. That being said, every modern browser (save for the mobile platform) includes javascript, and so unless your audience includes luddites with decade old computers, you can assume they have javascript.
The people you need to worry about, then, are those that specifically turn it off. This includes:
Corporate networks with tough security (not common, but some financial and defense institutions)
Paranoid web-heads
So, first, who is your audience? Are there other websites that are comparable to your target? Look at their site and success - do they degrade gracefully, and would yo be satisfied with their level of success?
If you are targeting mobile applications, though, you can't guarantee javascript.
-Adam
I would say that you should look at your target audience. If you can reasonably expect that they will have js enabled, and making everything work without any js is too much of a pain, then by all means - go ahead and ignore the non-js crowd, if, on the other hand you have to create a site that will be used by a very large audience/or you are perhaps building a government web site, then you must make sure that everything works, and it is easier in those cases to first build the site so that it works without any js, and add all the nice time-saving ajaxy bits later.
In general though, almost everyone has js enabled by default.
Though you should be aware that server-side validation of user posted data is a must in either case.