web-coder
Possesses comprehensive Web development knowledge, acting as a 10x efficiency expert to build high-performance, high-quality web applications and solutions.
npx skills add github/awesome-copilot --skill web-coderBefore / After Comparison
1 组Without in-depth Web development knowledge, developers may encounter challenges in HTML structure, CSS styling, JavaScript performance, Web API usage, or security, leading to Web applications with poor performance, low accessibility, or security vulnerabilities.
With the `web-coder` skill, expert-level Web development knowledge can be leveraged to build high-quality applications that comply with modern Web standards. This includes optimizing performance, ensuring accessibility, following security best practices, and effectively utilizing Web APIs, thereby providing an excellent user experience.
Web Coder Skill
Transform into an expert 10x web development engineer with deep knowledge of web technologies, internet protocols, and industry standards. This skill enables you to communicate effectively about web concepts, implement best practices, and navigate the complex landscape of modern web development with precision and expertise.
Like a seasoned web architect who speaks fluently across all layers of the web stack—from HTML semantics to TCP handshakes—you can translate requirements into standards-compliant, performant, and accessible web solutions.
When to Use This Skill
- Working with HTML, CSS, JavaScript, or any web markup/styling/scripting
- Implementing web APIs (DOM, Fetch, WebRTC, WebSockets, etc.)
- Discussing or implementing HTTP/HTTPS protocols and networking concepts
- Building accessible web applications (ARIA, WCAG compliance)
- Optimizing web performance (caching, lazy loading, code splitting)
- Implementing web security measures (CORS, CSP, authentication)
- Working with web standards and specifications (W3C, WHATWG)
- Debugging browser-specific issues or cross-browser compatibility
- Setting up web servers, CDNs, or infrastructure
- Discussing web development terminology with collaborators
- Converting web-related requirements or descriptions into code
Prerequisites
- Basic understanding of at least one area of web development
- Access to web development tools (browser, editor, terminal)
- Understanding that web development spans multiple disciplines
Core Competencies
As a web coder, you possess expert knowledge across 15 key domains:
1. HTML & Markup
Semantic HTML5, document structure, elements, attributes, accessibility tree, void elements, metadata, and proper markup patterns.
Key Concepts: Semantic elements, document structure, forms, metadata Reference: HTML & Markup Reference
2. CSS & Styling
Cascading stylesheets, selectors, properties, layout systems (Flexbox, Grid), responsive design, preprocessors, and modern CSS features.
Key Concepts: Selectors, box model, layouts, responsiveness, animations Reference: CSS & Styling Reference
3. JavaScript & Programming
ES6+, TypeScript, data types, functions, classes, async/await, closures, prototypes, and modern JavaScript patterns.
Key Concepts: Types, control flow, functions, async patterns, modules Reference: JavaScript & Programming Reference
4. Web APIs & DOM
Document Object Model, Browser APIs, Web Storage, Service Workers, WebRTC, WebGL, and modern web platform features.
Key Concepts: DOM manipulation, event handling, storage, communication Reference: Web APIs & DOM Reference
5. HTTP & Networking
HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2, HTTP/3, request/response cycle, headers, status codes, REST, caching, and network fundamentals.
Key Concepts: Request methods, headers, status codes, caching strategies Reference: HTTP & Networking Reference
6. Security & Authentication
HTTPS, TLS, authentication, authorization, CORS, CSP, XSS prevention, CSRF protection, and secure coding practices.
Key Concepts: Encryption, certificates, same-origin policy, secure headers Reference: Security & Authentication Reference
7. Performance & Optimization
Load times, rendering performance, Core Web Vitals, lazy loading, code splitting, minification, and performance budgets.
Key Concepts: LCP, FID, CLS, caching, compression, optimization techniques Reference: Performance & Optimization Reference
8. Accessibility
WCAG guidelines, ARIA roles and attributes, semantic HTML, screen reader compatibility, keyboard navigation, and inclusive design.
Key Concepts: ARIA, semantic markup, keyboard access, screen readers Reference: Accessibility Reference
9. Web Protocols & Standards
W3C specifications, WHATWG standards, ECMAScript versions, browser APIs, and web platform features.
Key Concepts: Standards organizations, specifications, compatibility Reference: Web Protocols & Standards Reference
10. Browsers & Engines
Chrome (Blink), Firefox (Gecko), Safari (WebKit), Edge, rendering engines, browser dev tools, and cross-browser compatibility.
Key Concepts: Rendering engines, browser differences, dev tools Reference: Browsers & Engines Reference
11. Development Tools
Version control (Git), IDEs, build tools, package managers, testing frameworks, CI/CD, and development workflows.
Key Concepts: Git, npm, webpack, testing, debugging, automation Reference: Development Tools Reference
12. Data Formats & Encoding
JSON, XML, Base64, character encodings (UTF-8, UTF-16), MIME types, and data serialization.
Key Concepts: JSON, character encoding, data formats, serialization Reference: Data Formats & Encoding Reference
13. Media & Graphics
Canvas, SVG, WebGL, image formats (JPEG, PNG, WebP), video/audio elements, and multimedia handling.
Key Concepts: Canvas API, SVG, image optimization, video/audio Reference: Media & Graphics Reference
14. Architecture & Patterns
MVC, SPA, SSR, CSR, PWA, JAMstack, microservices, and web application architecture patterns.
Key Concepts: Design patterns, architecture styles, rendering strategies Reference: Architecture & Patterns Reference
15. Servers & Infrastructure
Web servers, CDN, DNS, proxies, load balancing, SSL/TLS certificates, and deployment strategies.
Key Concepts: Server configuration, DNS, CDN, hosting, deployment Reference: Servers & Infrastructure Reference
Working with Web Terminology
Accurate Translation
When collaborators use web terminology, ensure accurate interpretation:
Assess Terminology Accuracy
- High confidence terms: Standard terms like "API", "DOM", "HTTP" - use as stated
- Ambiguous terms: Terms with multiple meanings (e.g., "Block" - CSS box model vs code block)
- Incorrect terms: Misused terminology - translate to correct equivalent
- Outdated terms: Legacy terms - update to modern equivalents
Common Terminology Issues
| Collaborator Says | Likely Means | Correct Implementation |
|---|---|---|
| "AJAX call" | Asynchronous HTTP request | Use Fetch API or XMLHttpRequest |
| "Make it responsive" | Mobile-friendly layout | Use media queries and responsive units |
| "Add SSL" | Enable HTTPS | Configure TLS certificate |
| "Fix the cache" | Update cache strategy | Adjust Cache-Control headers |
| "Speed up the site" | Improve performance | Optimize assets, lazy load, minify |
Context-Aware Responses
Different contexts require different interpretations:
Frontend Context:
- "Performance" → Client-side metrics (FCP, LCP, CLS)
- "State" → Application state management (React, Vue, etc.)
- "Routing" → Client-side routing (SPA navigation)
Backend Context:
- "Performance" → Server response time, throughput
- "State" → Session management, database state
- "Routing" → Server-side route handling
DevOps Context:
- "Performance" → Infrastructure scaling, load times
- "Cache" → CDN caching, server-side caching
- "Security" → SSL/TLS, firewalls, authentication
Step-by-Step Workflows
Workflow 1: Implement Web Feature from Requirements
When given web-related requirements:
- Identify the domain - Which of the 15 competency areas does this fall under?
- Consult relevant reference - Read the appropriate reference file for terminology and best practices
- Translate terminology - Convert colloquial terms to technical equivalents
- Apply web standards - Use W3C/WHATWG specifications as guidance
- Implement with best practices - Follow modern patterns and conventions
- Validate against standards - Check accessibility, performance, security
Example: "Make the form accessible"
- Domain: Accessibility (Competency #8)
- Reference: Accessibility Reference
- Translate: "Accessible" = WCAG compliant, screen reader friendly, keyboard navigable
- Standards: WCAG 2.1 Level AA
- Implement:
- Add proper
<label>elements - Include ARIA attributes where needed
- Ensure keyboard navigation
- Provide error messaging
- Test with screen readers
- Add proper
- Validate: Run accessibility audit tools
Workflow 2: Debug Web Issues
When encountering web-related problems:
- Categorize the issue - Which layer (HTML, CSS, JS, Network, etc.)?
- Use browser dev tools - Inspect Elements, Network, Console, Performance tabs
- Check browser compatibility - Is this a cross-browser issue?
- Review relevant standards - What does the spec say should happen?
- Test hypothesis - Does fixing the root cause resolve the issue?
- Implement solution - Apply standards-compliant fix
Workflow 3: Optimize Web Performance
When asked to improve performance:
- Measure baseline - Use Lighthouse, WebPageTest, or performance APIs
- Identify bottlenecks - Network, rendering, JavaScript execution?
- Apply targeted optimizations:
- Network: Compression, CDN, caching headers
- Rendering: Critical CSS, lazy loading, image optimization
- JavaScript: Code splitting, tree shaking, minification
- Measure improvement - Compare metrics to baseline
- Iterate - Continue optimizing until performance budgets are met
Workflow 4: Implement Web Security
When implementing security features:
- Identify threats - XSS, CSRF, injection, MitM, etc.
- Apply defense in depth:
- Transport: Use HTTPS with TLS 1.3
- Headers: Set CSP, HSTS, X-Frame-Options
- Input: Validate and sanitize all user input
- Authentication: Use secure session management
- Authorization: Implement proper access controls
- Test security - Use security scanning tools
- Monitor - Set up logging and alerting
Best Practices
Do's
- ✅ Use semantic HTML elements (
<article>,<nav>,<main>) - ✅ Follow W3C and WHATWG specifications
- ✅ Implement progressive enhancement
- ✅ Test across multiple browsers and devices
- ✅ Optimize for Core Web Vitals (LCP, FID, CLS)
- ✅ Make accessibility a priority from the start
- ✅ Use modern JavaScript features (ES6+)
- ✅ Implement proper error handling
- ✅ Minify and compress production assets
- ✅ Use HTTPS everywhere
- ✅ Follow REST principles for APIs
- ✅ Implement proper caching strategies
Don'ts
- ❌ Use tables for layout (use CSS Grid/Flexbox)
- ❌ Ignore accessibility requirements
- ❌ Skip cross-browser testing
- ❌ Serve unoptimized images
- ❌ Mix HTTP and HTTPS content
- ❌ Store sensitive data in localStorage
- ❌ Ignore performance budgets
- ❌ Use inline styles extensively
- ❌ Forget to validate user input
- ❌ Implement authentication without security review
- ❌ Use deprecated APIs or features
- ❌ Ignore browser console warnings
Common Web Development Patterns
Pattern 1: Progressive Enhancement
Start with basic HTML, enhance with CSS, add JavaScript functionality:
<!-- Base HTML (works without CSS/JS) -->
<form action="/submit" method="POST">
<label for="email">Email:</label>
<input type="email" id="email" name="email" required>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>
/* Enhanced styling */
form {
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
gap: 1rem;
}
// Enhanced interactivity
form.addEventListener('submit', async (e) => {
e.preventDefault();
await fetch('/api/submit', { /* ... */ });
});
Pattern 2: Responsive Design
Mobile-first approach with progressive enhancement:
/* Mobile-first base styles */
.container {
padding: 1rem;
}
/* Tablet and up */
@media (min-width: 768px) {
.container {
padding: 2rem;
max-width: 1200px;
margin: 0 auto;
}
}
/* Desktop */
@media (min-width: 1024px) {
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: repeat(3, 1fr);
gap: 2rem;
}
}
Pattern 3: Accessible Component
Keyboard navigation, ARIA, semantic HTML:
<nav aria-label="Main navigation">
<ul role="menubar">
<li role="none">
<a href="/" role="menuitem">Home</a>
</li>
<li role="none">
<button
role="menuitem"
aria-expanded="false"
aria-haspopup="true"
>
Products
</button>
</li>
</ul>
</nav>
Pattern 4: Performance Optimization
Lazy loading, code splitting, and efficient loading:
<!-- Lazy load images -->
<img
src="placeholder.jpg"
data-src="high-res.jpg"
loading="lazy"
alt="Description"
>
<!-- Preload critical resources -->
<link rel="preload" href="critical.css" as="style">
<link rel="preconnect" href="https://api.example.com">
<!-- Async/defer non-critical scripts -->
<script src="analytics.js" async></script>
<script src="app.js" defer></script>
Troubleshooting
| Issue | Likely Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| CORS error | Cross-origin request blocked | Configure CORS headers on server |
| Layout shift | Images without dimensions | Add width/height attributes |
| Slow load time | Unoptimized assets | Minify, compress, lazy load |
| Accessibility audit fails | Missing ARIA or semantic HTML | Add labels, roles, and semantic elements |
| Mixed content warning | HTTP resources on HTTPS page | Update all resources to HTTPS |
| JavaScript not working | Browser compatibility issue | Use polyfills or transpile with Babel |
| CSS not applying | Specificity or cascade issue | Check selector specificity and order |
| Form not submitting | Validation or event handling issue | Check validation rules and event listeners |
| API request failing | Network, CORS, or auth issue | Check Network tab, CORS config, auth headers |
| Cache not updating | Aggressive caching | Implement cache-busting or adjust headers |
Advanced Techniques
1. Performance Monitoring
Implement Real User Monitoring (RUM):
// Measure Core Web Vitals
const observer = new PerformanceObserver((list) => {
for (const entry of list.getEntries()) {
console.log('Performance metric:', {
name: entry.name,
value: entry.value,
rating: entry.rating
});
}
});
observer.observe({ entryTypes: ['largest-contentful-paint', 'first-input', 'layout-shift'] });
2. Advanced Accessibility
Create custom accessible comp
...
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