Mozilla - Website Review

Does the site's home page validate?

Does the site's home page validate?
No, the site's home page does not validate.

Find any other page on the site. Does the second page validate?

Does the second page validate?
No, the Advanced Form Styling page does not validate.

Document how many validation errors and/or warnings may exist on each of the two pages you validate.

How many errors and warnings are there for the first page?
There are 28 errors and 0 warnings.
How many errors and warnings are there for the second page?
There are 32 errors and 5 warnings.

How would you rate the site's design, on a scale of 1(horrible) to 10 (fantastic)? Why?

Rating
8.
Why?
This site is really similar to other websites that act as a guidebook to programming. As such, the overall look is very similar to websites like w3schools, meaning that it looks good. The dark mode really and the emphasis on keywords make it easier to absorb information.

How would you rate the site's usability, on a scale of 1(horrible) to 10 (fantastic)? Why?

Rating
8.
Why?
It feels really easy to work and navigate around. Everything feels like it's only a click away. The way the content of the page is divided and broken up makes it easy to find specific parts of content instead of having to find it manually. Also, the way the code is colored makes each programming language very distinguishable from each other.

Does the site meet its purpose?

Purpose met?
Yes, I would say so. The purpose of Mozilla is to be the ultimate guide for web development, focusing on HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. The page on form styling in particular lets you see how each code portion would look in an actual browser, and the way the white background of HTML contrasts the dark theme of the rest of the page makes it quick to spot. If there is a place on the web to learn about HTML, CSS, or JavaScript, Mozilla is the go-to website.