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Is it safe now to develop web application with HTML 5 specifications? or should we wait longer for final standards?

I want to start developing a new project. I want it to be up to date in every aspects. should I wait more for html 5 or I can start programming based on it?

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    How do you define "safe"? That it's mostly stable? That people can actually use it? Something else? Mar 27, 2010 at 20:52
  • sry, by the safe, I mean stability. can I trust implemented features on the browsers and build my program on them with no worry about changes later. Mar 28, 2010 at 6:38
  • imo the only issue which is not really sorted yet is the video format/codec so if you wanna be safe use flash or a fallback solution
    – Knu
    Mar 28, 2010 at 8:09

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It all depends on your audience.

If most of your audience is going to be fairly hip web developers that know to use a decent browser, you are probably going to be fine using HTML5.

However, if your audience is any government institution (school, etc), business place, etc, you might not want to use it yet. My school currently runs on Internet Explorer 6/7, and one of my teacher constantly complains about that "Your browser is not supported" message at the top of Youtube. These people probably don't have any control over the browser they use, and might be a bit behind due to the IT guys.

Find your audience, and use what you are comfortable using with them.

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    my audience will be the whole community using web services all over the world. so according to your answer, it is better to work with previous versions. thank you. Mar 28, 2010 at 6:45
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It depends what you which features you want to implement. HTML 5 is a very broad standard covering video, dynamic bitmaps, geolocation, more semantic tags etc.

No browser has implemented all HTML5 features, all have implemented some

This will tell you most of what you need to know about and which browsers support it.

http://diveintohtml5.ep.io/

Which part were you particularly interested in? Many people want to use canvas which is the dynamic graphics tag (simulates svg in an element). Canvas works on all major browsers except IE, though support for canvas is predicted in IE9

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  • "canvas which is the dynamic graphics tag (simulates svg in an element)" -- huh? Canvas and SVG are quite distinct. Neither one "simulates" the other, and both are elements.
    – Ken
    Mar 28, 2010 at 4:30
  • Ken - what i'm trying to say is that canvas gives you a similar API to what SVG offers
    – plodder
    Mar 29, 2010 at 15:58
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It depends on your audience. If they have the latest browsers then you can start using parts of HTML 5. If you don't have a good understanding of your user base then you might want to use web analytics to understand the capabilities of their browsers. Developers tend to have newer browsers but corporations or schools may not. You should also do some research on HTML 5 and understand if you can get up to speed with it quickly if deployment time is a concern.

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Use progressive enhancement. A lot of the HTML5 features (application cache, the custom form fields, the extra semantic tags) will do no harm in unsupported browsers (though you might need the HTML5 shiv from Remy Sharp), but give a bonus to users and spiders who can use them. Other features (video tag, database storage, web workers, geolocation) can use workarounds for compatibility with older browsers - the Modernizer library linked by Mark Pilgrim makes this very easy. If your app is usese Geodata, for example, you could use the browser-based geolocation where available and fallback to something IP-based.

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  • You know, Once I read the working draft of HTML 5 on W3C, I really scared!! there will be lots of differences which can change the look of the site completely. So for now, I prefer not to use html 5 doctype, and stick to previous standards!! but it is a good idea to use some of compatible features. Mar 29, 2010 at 6:09

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