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jQuery vs Moodle

Based on 1895 and 1 real audits

MetricjQueryMoodleWinner
Performance4549Moodle
Accessibility8683jQuery
Best Practices8796Moodle
SEO9083jQuery
Security6569Moodle
TTFB442ms1034msjQuery
Composite7372jQuery
Performance
jQuery
45
Moodle
49
Accessibility
jQuery
86
Moodle
83
Security
jQuery
65
Moodle
69
SEO
jQuery
90
Moodle
83
Composite
jQuery
73
Moodle
72

jQuery outperforms Moodle in 4 of 7 categories, with a stronger composite score (73 vs 72). Moodle leads in performance, best practices, security.

When to choose jQuery

Choose jQuery when your primary concern is server response time and SEO. Its audit data shows consistent strength in these areas across the sampled sites.

When to choose Moodle

Choose Moodle when your primary concern is best practices and performance. Its audit data shows consistent strength in these areas across the sampled sites.

How this comparison was built

Scores are medians across 1895 audited jQuery sites and 1 audited Moodle sites in the BeaverCheck database. Every audit runs the same 100+ checks — Lighthouse performance, security headers, accessibility, SEO, server response time — against a real URL. No vendor input, no sponsorship, no affiliate links. Read the full methodology →

Small sample: one or both technologies have fewer than 10 audited sites. Treat these numbers as directional — medians stabilize around 20–30 audits per side.

FAQ

Which is faster, jQuery or Moodle?
Based on real BeaverCheck audits, Moodle sites score higher on Lighthouse performance (49 vs 45 on average).
Which has better security, jQuery or Moodle?
Moodle sites score higher on security analysis (69 vs 65 on average).
Which has better accessibility, jQuery or Moodle?
Accessibility scores measured by Lighthouse WCAG 2.1 checks favor jQuery (86 vs 83). Both technologies can be made fully accessible with care — the difference reflects common patterns in the sampled sites, not inherent platform limits.
Which is better for SEO, jQuery or Moodle?
jQuery sites score higher on Lighthouse SEO signals (90 vs 83 on average), which cover meta tags, crawlability, mobile friendliness, and structured data. Content strategy and backlinks still matter more than platform choice for ranking.
Which has faster server response (TTFB), jQuery or Moodle?
jQuery sites show lower Time to First Byte (442 ms vs 1034 ms on average). TTFB depends heavily on hosting and CDN setup rather than the technology itself, but the sampled sites suggest a meaningful difference in common deployment patterns.
Should I choose jQuery or Moodle for my website?
Both platforms have trade-offs. Moodle scores higher on overall composite score while jQuery may excel in metrics you care about most. Run a free BeaverCheck audit on a real site using each to compare the metrics relevant to your use case.

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