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rviscomi authored Nov 6, 2019
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion src/templates/en/2019/chapters/markup.html
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Expand Up @@ -331,7 +331,7 @@ <h2 id="perspective-on-value-and-usage">Perspective on value and usage</h2>
<h2 id="lots-of-data-real-dom-on-the-real-web">Lots of data: real DOM on the real web</h2>
<p>With this perspective in mind about what use of native/standard features looks like in the dataset, let's talk about the non-standard stuff.</p>
<p>You might expect that many of the elements we measured are used only on a single web page, but in fact all of the 5,048 elements appear on more than one page. The fewest pages an element in our dataset appears on is 15. About a fifth of them occur on more than 100 pages. About 7% occur on more than 1,000 pages.</p>
<p>To help analyze the data, I hacked together a <a href="https://rainy-periwinkle.glitch.me">little tool with Glitch</a>. You can use this tool yourself, and please share a permalink back with the <a href="https://twitter.com/HTTPArchive">@HTTPAchive</a> along with your observations. (Tommy Hodgins has also built a similar <a href="https://github.com/tomhodgins/hade">CLI tool</a> which you can use to explore.)</p>
<p>To help analyze the data, I hacked together a <a href="https://rainy-periwinkle.glitch.me">little tool with Glitch</a>. You can use this tool yourself, and please share a permalink back with the <a href="https://twitter.com/HTTPArchive">@HTTPArchive</a> along with your observations. (Tommy Hodgins has also built a similar <a href="https://github.com/tomhodgins/hade">CLI tool</a> which you can use to explore.)</p>
<p>Let's look at some data.</p>
<h3 id="products-and-libraries-and-their-custom-markup">Products (and libraries) and their custom markup</h3>
<p>For several non-standard elements, their prevalence may have more to do with their inclusion in popular third party tools than first party adoption. For example, the <code>&lt;fb:like&gt;</code> element is found on 0.3% of pages not because site owners are explicitly writing it out but because they include the Facebook widget. Many of the elements <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20060203031245/http://code.google.com/webstats/2005-12/editors.html">Hixie mentioned 14 years ago</a> seem to have dwindled, but others are still pretty huge:</p>
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