Sure. My question is why.
The output that runs in the browser at runtime has its own set of same constraints. Modern browser version, etc.
First of all, don't do that. It's obnoxious. Secondly:
> That's a very, very common setup.
So? Falling back on the argument that, essentially, "lots of people do this" is about as worthy as attempting to counter by saying that the other person/what they are doing is weird[1]. (It's actually slightly more respectable, but that's only because of how unrespectable the call-them-a-weirdo path is.) You either have an argument for $THING that will hold up under scrutiny without appealing to how weird/anti-weird $THING is, or you don't.
Thirdly, you are not compelled to comment. (What makes your decision to join in even more mystifying is that you were not the person being addressed—at least their impulse to do so would have made sense, even if the argument was still a bad one.) If you don't actually have an answer, why bother commenting at all?