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Plenty of websites do this; on GNU/Linux most applications do this; I
guess the goal is to make the most specific information go first, so
that tabs remain identifiable as they become narrower.
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The logic for the various titles on any given page is:
∃README
∃title block
<title> ⇒ title block
<header> <h1> ⇒ title block
TOC <h1> ⇒ "Index for {target}"
∄title block
<title> ⇒ "{target}" or "README"
<header> <h1> ⇒ ∅
TOC <h1> ⇒ "Index for {target}"
∄README
<title> ⇒ "Index for {target}"
<header> <h1> ⇒ "Index"
TOC <h1> ⇒ ∅
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Likewise, use relative links so that things work when just browsing
files locally without a server.
Next: tweak or remove redundant titles.
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They seem to be basically nonexistent now, as well as unsupported.
Sources:
https://netmarketshare.com/browser-market-share.aspx?id=browsersDesktopVersions
https://analytics.wikimedia.org/dashboards/browsers/#desktop-site-by-browser/browser-family-and-major-tabular-view
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