MDN Web Docs
Cross-browser documentation center on web technologies From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
MDN Web Docs, previously Mozilla Developer Network and formerly Mozilla Developer Center, is a documentation repository and learning resource for web developers. It was started by Mozilla in 2005[2] as a unified place for documentation about open web standards, Mozilla's own projects, and developer guides.[3]
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Native name | Mozilla Developer Network |
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Formerly | Mozilla Developer Center |
Type of site | Wiki |
Available in |
|
Owner | Mozilla |
Industry | open-source software development |
URL | developer |
Commercial | No |
Registration | Optional, required to edit content |
Users | over 45.000[1] |
Launched | 2005 |
Current status | Online |
Content license | CC BY-SA v2.5+ et al. |
Written in |
MDN Web Docs content is maintained by Mozilla, Google employees, and volunteers (community of developers and technical writers). It also contains content contributed by Microsoft, Google, and Samsung who, in 2017, announced they would shut down their own web documentation projects and move all their documentation to MDN Web Docs.[4] Topics include HTML5, JavaScript, CSS, Web APIs, Django, Node.js, WebExtensions, MathML, and others.[5]
History
Summarize
Perspective
In 2005, Mozilla Corporation started the project under the name Mozilla Developer Center,[2] and still funds the servers and staff of its projects.
The initial content for the website was provided by DevEdge, for which the Mozilla Foundation was granted a license by AOL.[6][2] The site now contains a mix of content migrated from DevEdge and mozilla.org, as well as original and more up-to-date content.[7][8] Documentation was also migrated from XULPlanet.com.
On Oct 3, 2016, Brave browser added Mozilla Developer Network as one of its default search engines options.[9]
In 2017, MDN Web Docs became the unified documentation of web technology for Google, Samsung, Microsoft, and Mozilla.[4][10] Microsoft started redirecting pages from Microsoft Developer Network to MDN.[11]
In 2019, Mozilla started Beta testing a new reader site for MDN Web Docs written in React (instead of jQuery; some jQuery functionality was replaced with Cheerio library).[12] The new site was launched on December 14, 2020.[13] Since December 14, 2020, all editable content is stored in a Git repository hosted on GitHub, where contributors open pull requests and discuss changes.[14]
On January 25 2021,[15] the Open Web Docs (OWD) organization was launched as a non-profit fiscal entity to collect funds for MDN development.[16] As of March 2023[update], the top financial contributors of OWD are Google, Microsoft, Igalia, Canva, and JetBrains.[17]
In March 2022, MDN launched a redesign with a new logo[18] and a paid subscription called MDN Plus.[19]
See also
References
External links
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