Your "C" Class Web Developer might be working for a large corporate entity [bank] or a Government agency that requires IE to work with some random legacy portion of their web-based software. I think for most of us IE isn't any sort of standard, but it may be a client requirement.
(Also, no #CSS tag for this article? JavaScript can usually be pretty easily polyfilled, but CSS, not always. CSS in IE is the bane of front-end devs - Including IE11! )
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Your "C" Class Web Developer might be working for a large corporate entity [bank] or a Government agency that requires IE to work with some random legacy portion of their web-based software. I think for most of us IE isn't any sort of standard, but it may be a client requirement.
(Also, no #CSS tag for this article? JavaScript can usually be pretty easily polyfilled, but CSS, not always. CSS in IE is the bane of front-end devs - Including IE11! )