The customer asks to show him examples of shops on Angular + Material Design. As I understand it, I need to go through random stores and weed out those that work on this bundle for certain reasons.

How can, being a simple visitor to the site, determine that it uses these technologies? It would be nice to still be able to find out whether the backend of the site uses Node.js and WebSocket.

  • This question should be closed, because the question is offtopic. The site addresses programming questions, and does not collect sample projects. - AK
  • The question is related to programming. In another place I do not know where to look. - Valeriu Vodnicear
  • You can try to ask a similar format in the chat so. - AK
  • 2
    == The comments above refer to the previous version of the question; the question itself was subsequently reformulated == . - ߊߚߤߘ
  • one
    @ValeriuVodnicear, the question is old, are you sure that there are problems due to it? The reformulation of Arhad helped, but only a little. - user207618

1 answer 1

There are sites that automatically perform work on the definition of the site engine. You drive in the URL - they give you an assessment of which engine. Some sites, realizing that the probabilistic assessment - give several versions.

How it works? Some engines can be identified by installed cookies (example: bitrix sets BITRIX_ cookies by BITRIX_ , although this can be changed in this engine), by some license files in the site root, by specific lines in the source code, by location of folders, by robots. txt and the like.

Specific examples of such sites - look in Google, they are different every year.