W3C seal for my websites

Good Night.

When chatting with friends, they told me that it would be interesting to put the W3C validation stamp on the site. The fact that it has the seal, in addition to making the site lighter and error-free, is much better for SEO (that's what I heard).

Anyway, I went to visit the validation site: https://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator /

When I tried to pass a site of mine, hundreds of errors appeared. Most, aimed at Bootstrap.

My question Is This: Is this seal really important? If positive, shouldn't I use Bootstrap or any Framework?

Author: Hebert Richard Masseno Dias, 2017-08-08

1 answers

The seal is not important to the user, but it is important to the community of developers who advocate in favor of the W3C specifications, but does not guarantee anything.

Some sites use the W3 Consortioum seals only to promote the new specifications as is the case with HTML5 and CSS3 (W3 staff themselves encourage this. Stamping on shirts, brooches, stickers, etc), others use improperly to show that they adhere to the new standards of the specifications, others, most of those who use it are actually compliant with the new technology.

With the advent of HTML5, development began to care a lot about accessibility, emphasizing, for example, the semantics of HTML, turning the technologies to the user, so developers can shape better experiences for them.

Stamps are not about the speed of traffic on your website or application, but about the accessibility .

The Internet is the most democratic space you will ever find, however, developers still sin a lot with respect to universal access .

You should not only worry about" is running", but also about"is running for everyone".

How Will a screen reader behave when entering reading your site?

It is difficult to strictly follow the rules of HTML5 and the new Web technologies that accompany it, and which revolutionize the Web every day using a framework , which is essentially generic, in the vast majority of cases.

See the website of the Paciello Group, about accessibility.

Accessible Culture

Read more about the use of stamps on the HTML5 logo home page .

Learn how to use a tool of type HTML5 Outliner .

You can use as many stamps as you want, but we users will only worry about one that says " site insurance".

The average user is not interested in how the sites were made, they will rarely link the technology used to security or speed.

Search more about Philippe Le Hegaret .

I hope I contributed to the discussion.

 3
Author: , 2017-08-08 04:08:32