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What things should a programmer implementing the technical details of a web site address before making the site public? If Jeff Atwood can forget about HttpOnly cookies, sitemaps, and cross-site request forgeries all in the same site, what important thing could I be forgetting as well?

I'm thinking about this from a web developer's perspective, such that someone else is creating the actual design and content for the site. So while usability and content may be more important than the platform, you the programmer have little say in that. What you do need to worry about is that your implementation of the platform is stable, performs well, is secure, and meets any other business goals (like not cost too much, take too long to build, and rank as well with Google as the content supports).

Think of this from the perspective of a developer who's done some work for intranet-type applications in a fairly trusted environment, and is about to have his first shot and putting out a potentially popular site for the entire big bad world wide web.

Also: I'm looking for something more specific than just a vague "web standards" response. I mean, HTML, javascript, and CSS over HTTP are pretty much a given, especially when I've already specified that you're a professional web developer. So going beyond that, Which standards? In what circumstances, and why? Provide a link to the standard's spec.


This question is community wiki, so please feel free to edit that answer to add links to good articles that will help explain or teach each particular point.

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vote up 24 vote down

It might be a bit outside of the scope, but I'd say that knowing how robots.txt and search engine spiders work is a plus.

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vote up 9 vote down
  • Valid (X)HTML - with the appropriate tags.
  • No broken links (See above about relative links)
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vote up 9 vote down

How to work with absolute and relative paths.

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