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Nalezeno "accessibility": 292

Making Disabled Buttons More Inclusive


Let’s talk about disabled buttons. Specifically, let’s get into why we use them and how we can do better than the traditional disabled attribute in HTML (e.g. <button disabled> ) to mark a button as disabled. There are lots of … The post Making Disabled Buttons More Inclusive...

Collective #659


Frontend Practice * Noise in Creative Coding * Practical Accessibility The post Collective #659 appeared first on Codrops

Troll Makes Up Path Of Exile Ban Over Accessibility, Is Jerk


This week, a supposed player claimed to have been banned from action RPG Path of Exile for using a macro to make the game accessible. Other players and accessibility activists took up their cause. Now, it appears the whole thing was a troll. In my professional journalistic opinion: what...

Some Articles About Accessibility I’ve Saved Recently


“Good news about display: contents and Chrome” — Rachel Andrew notes that the accessibility danger of using display: contents; is fixed in Chrome. The problem was that, say you had a parent div that is laid out as a grid … The post Some Articles About Accessibility I’ve...

Where the World Wide Web Shines


Here’s a fabulous post by Vitaly Friedman that looks at how to make accessible front-end components and what problems there are today when it comes to building them. There’s so much great info packed into this one post that I’m … The post Where the World Wide Web Shines appeared first...

Overlay Fact Sheet


I would hope all our web designer/developer spidey senses trigger when the solution to an accessibility problem isn’t “fix the issue” but rather “add extra stuff to the page.” This Overlay Fact Sheet website explains that. An “Overlay” is one … The...

HTML Inputs and Labels: A Love Story


Most inputs have something in common — they are happiest with a companion label! And the happiness doesn’t stop there. Forms with proper inputs and labels are much easier for people to use and that makes people happy too. A… The post HTML Inputs and Labels: A Love Story appeared first...

Imagining native skip links


I love it when standards evolve from something that a bunch of developers are already doing, and making it easier and foolproof. Kitty Giraudel is onto that here with skip links, something that every website should probably have, and that … The post Imagining native skip links appeared first...

How We Improved the Accessibility of Our Single Page App Menu


I recently started working on a Progressive Web App (PWA) for a client with my team. We’re using React with client-side routing via React Router, and one of the first elements that we made was the main menu. Menus … The post How We Improved the Accessibility of Our Single Page App Menu...

Beautiful accessibility with Floating Focus


Imagine if your :focus styles animated from element to element as you tab through a site. Like the focus ring up and flew across the page to the next element. The spirit of it is similar to smooth scrolling: it’s … The post Beautiful accessibility with Floating Focus appeared first...

Responsible Web Applications


Joy Heron bought a cool domain name and published an article there: Luckily, with modern HTML and CSS, we can create responsive and accessible web apps with relative ease. In my years of doing software development, I have learned some … The post Responsible Web Applications appeared first...

JavaScript Wake Lock API


An enjoyable web apps rely on engineers implementing the APIs that cover all of the small things. Those small things sometimes improve performance, usability, accessibility, and the app’s relationship with its host system. The Wake Lock API is the latter — an API that allows developers...

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