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Progressive Enhancement

Progressive enhancement is a web development strategy where the basic version of a website works first.

Extra features are added later for browsers that support them.

This approach helps websites stay accessible, reliable, and fast.

Start With HTML

The first step is to create a meaningful HTML content.

The page should still work if CSS or JavaScript fails to load.

Example

<h1>Newsletter Signup</h1>

<form action="/signup" method="post">
  <label for="email">Email:</label>
  <input type="email" id="email" name="email" required>
  <button type="submit">Join</button>
</form>
Try it Yourself »

The form above works without JavaScript.


Add CSS for Better Design

After the HTML works, CSS can improve the appearance of the page.

Example

<style>
button {
  background-color:#04AA6D;
  color:white;
  padding:10px;
  border:none;
}
</style>
Try it Yourself »

Add JavaScript as an Enhancement

JavaScript can improve the user experience, but the page should not depend completely on it.

For example, JavaScript can add instant validation or animations.

Example

<script>
const form = document.querySelector("form");

form.addEventListener("submit", function() {
  alert("Form submitted!");
});
</script>
Try it Yourself »

The form still works even if this script does not load.


Why Progressive Enhancement Matters

Users browse the web with different devices, browsers, and internet speeds.

Some users may disable JavaScript completely.

Others may use older browsers or assistive technologies.

Progressive enhancement helps ensure that everybody can still access the content.

Tip: Try testing your website with JavaScript disabled.


Graceful Degradation vs Progressive Enhancement

Graceful degradation starts with a complex website and tries to make it work on older browsers.

Progressive enhancement starts simple and adds features step by step.

Progressive Enhancement Graceful Degradation
Starts simple Starts advanced
Adds features later Removes unsupported features
Focuses on accessibility Focuses on compatibility

Modern HTML Helps

Modern browsers support many features that once required JavaScript.

Examples include:

  • required form validation
  • <details> expandable content
  • loading="lazy" image loading
  • CSS animations and transitions

This makes progressive enhancement easier than ever.


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