- Feb 4, 2016
- 2,520
source: Browser Makers Agree to Move Web Documentation to Mozilla's Portal
Mozilla, Microsoft, Google, Samsung, and the W3C have agreed today to unify all their documentation sites under one single roof, on Mozilla's MDN portal.
Previously known as the Mozilla Developer Network, the site has been rebranded today as MDN Web Docs, and will house all web standards-related docs, along with cross-browser usage instructions.
The decision came after more than two decades, during which time developers had to run around different documentation sites, in order to understand how web standards worked and how each rendered in each browser.
Microsoft, Google have already started moving docs to MDN
In an announcement today, Microsoft said it already started redirecting over 7,700 MSDN (Microsoft Developer Network) pages to the new MDN Web Docs site.
"Over 5000 MDN edits later, the entire web API surface of Microsoft Edge (as of the 10/2017 Windows 10 Fall Creators Update, Build 16299) is now documented on MDN," Microsoft said today.
Google, in a similar announcement, revealed that "for the last several years, Chrome has been transitioning its web documentation efforts to MDN."
MDN started in the old Netscape days
According to Mozilla, the MDN portal receives around six million users per month, of which 95% visit documentation pages on web standards and technologies like JavaScript, HTML5, CSS, and the newer Web APIs.
The other 5% visit Firefox and Thunderbird-specific documentation. Mozilla promised today to move the Firefox-specific docs into a separate section of the site, clearly separated from the cross-browser documentation pages.