In an effort to increase the awareness of the quality of the Mozilla JavaScript Documentation, I would really enjoy if W3Schools was knocked off their place in Google for many top searches. Mozilla's documentation is top notch and they do deserve to have Google place weight on the links that are upon answers.
1 Answer
I'll take your word for it that MDN is a great source of documentation on the JavaScript implementation in Mozilla browsers.
But JavaScript and ECMAScript are standards, not controlled by development teams of individual browsers. And browser-specific extensions are not standard, no matter how much market share that browser has.
For that reason, I disagree with your desire to help implementation-specific documentation command the top spot on a Google search. I wouldn't want MSDN getting top search result for C++11 topics either. And I'm sure you'd be very unhappy if SO pushed MSDN to the top of JavaScript searches.
Naturally for information on the Mozilla XUL language, or Mozilla plugin model, MDN ought to command the top spot. Just as for Win32 APIs, MSDN should because it is the canonical reference for those.
That doesn't necessarily mean it's a good idea for Stack Exchange to be in the business of promoting those developer sites and helping them get PageRank.
So I say, keep nofollow
on links to documentation that isn't vendor-neutral. And yes @animuson, nofollow
on all w3schools links, because quality IS important.
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7MDN isn't really implementation-specific. developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Reference/…– bjb568May 5, 2014 at 3:46
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2@bjb568: MSDN tries to cover the standard also, by including "Microsoft Specific" heading for extensions or deviations. But invariably, examples, recommendations, and everything else are based off what works best in a single implementation. But feel free to disagree. You won't hurt my feelings downvoting an answer on meta. And I don't use enough Javascript to know whether there exists any neutral documentation of sufficient quality, or if the only reasonable choices are which vendor's docs to use. May 5, 2014 at 3:50
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2Fine, it may work best on FireFox, but it's still the best documentation for all browsers.– bjb568May 5, 2014 at 3:51
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14@BenVoigt, have you used MDN? I use it as my primary ECMAScript reference. In fact, it is pretty accurate on cross browser support. I challenge someone to find a better ECMAScript reference for Chrome or Safari, than MDN. (MSDN is pretty good for IE.) May 5, 2014 at 4:59
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4MDN is a wiki, and pretty vendor-neutral when it comes to the basics. (It also offers documentation on building Firefox extensions, for example, but quite separately.)– Ry- ModMay 5, 2014 at 14:36
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I agree. StackOverflow should put
rel=nofollow
on all outbound links that do not go to the StackExchange network. May 5, 2014 at 14:40 -
1MDN also offers documentation for Chrome-specific features, e.g. the virtual FileSystem API: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/WebGuide/API/File_System.– Rob WMay 5, 2014 at 14:45
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@JohnConde I'm not that familiar with SEO. What kind of implications would it have and are they really that big of a concern? StackOverflow answers are usually on the first page of Google search results. May 5, 2014 at 14:51
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I rmemeber a few years ago with SO having issues with scraper sites ranking higher than them in Google. They worked directly with Google to correct the issue. One of the changes they made was to link out to some authoritative sites as that is a ranking factor (one of many but one nonetheless). Apparently Google felt it was important for SO to make that change. May 5, 2014 at 14:53
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@Romoku, do you really want
rel=nofollow
on all outbound links? Then Remove nofollow on links deemed reputable should be reverted.– ArjanMay 5, 2014 at 16:30
nofollow
on links deemed reputable" I'm surprised that they're not already un-nofollowed
-ed...rel="nofollow"
to W3Schools links no matter what?:P