On 16/4/09 05:56, Gary Barber wrote:
Now it is
h#{
left: -px;
}
that had issues with screen readers.
Interesting. Not in my experience.
What screen readers and versions are you talking about? Do you have
a test case that demonstrates the problem?
I'd agree with Benjamin.
Roger Hudson
From: "Gary Barber"
Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis wrote:
On 16/4/09 05:56, Gary Barber wrote:
Now it is
h#{
left: -px;
}
that had issues with screen readers.
Interesting. Not in my experience.
this may have improved with the browsers and readers (as happens), but
when in was popular, year
Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis wrote:
On 16/4/09 05:56, Gary Barber wrote:
Now it is
h#{
left: -px;
}
that had issues with screen readers.
Interesting. Not in my experience.
What screen readers and versions are you talking about? Do you have a
test case that demonstrates the problem?
--
Ben
On 16/4/09 05:56, Gary Barber wrote:
Now it is
h#{
left: -px;
}
that had issues with screen readers.
Interesting. Not in my experience.
What screen readers and versions are you talking about? Do you have a
test case that demonstrates the problem?
--
Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis
*
Hi guys,
Just to clarify. Google reads the sourcecode. In the order the
sourcecode is presented. Of course you can reposition with css. That
doesn't change the order of the sourcecode. Google doesn't generally
request the CSS file (check your logs) - unless other flags are
indicated (e.g p
Personally Marvin if I was you, I would stick to plain, vanilla HTML without
any graphics or styling.
The navigation on that site is so small it's difficult to read. Graphics and
styling are a big issue for you as you are blind, so there is no point in
trying to defeat the impossible.
Just focus