I've been always under the impression that sighted users surfing with a
keyboard, have it easier to realize if there's a Skip Navigation link (since
nothing gets on focus) and it's easier for them to navigate with tab key, so
it's not such a burden.
I mean, suffering the navigation on a screen rea
Understood. I was addressing the common misconception that skip links are
only for screen reader users. Bob may have had a reason for phrasing the
question the way he did, but it probably should have been phrased
differently.
_
From: li...@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:li...@webstandardsg
Mark,
I just add something like this to things that are for mobile/text-only:
.noscreen { text-index: -3000px;
}
Skip Link
It's not perfect (keyboard users with a full blown browser will have to
tab through them but won't see the links) but combining that concept
with a little user
Felix Miata wrote:
Email is supposed to be text communication.
And yet, remarkably, there's multipart/alternative as a MIME type.
Go figure.
--
Hassan Schroeder - has...@webtuitive.com
webtuitive design === (+1) 408-621-3445 === http://webtuitive.com
twitter: @h
On 2009/10/28 17:37 (GMT-0400) kris wright composed:
> email clients vary
> wildly in their HTML rendering capabilities, and on occasion actually modify
> your HTML code makes things even more confusing.
Email is supposed to be text communication. Web pages are web pages. If you
want your email r
Thanks for that Steve - but I was trying answer the question:
"Can anyone point me to the best way of providing a 'skip nav' procedure
which is invisible to sighted readers "
regards
Mark
_
From: li...@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:li...@webstandardsgroup.org]
On Behalf Of Steve
A 1-pixel image works for screen reader users but it is no use for sighted
people who use keyboard navigation.
_
From: li...@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:li...@webstandardsgroup.org] On
Behalf Of Mark Huppert
Sent: 28 October 2009 23:37
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: RE: [WSG] sk
spot the typo
regards
Mark
_
From: li...@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:li...@webstandardsgroup.org]
On Behalf Of Mark Huppert
Sent: Thursday, 29 October 2009 10:34 AM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: RE: [WSG] skip links
Steve
One way to do it is make a transparent
Steve
One way to do it is make a transparent gif of 1px x 1px. Then
embed that in your link with no text. Have an ALT or a TITLE with
'skip navigation'
regards
Mark
Mark Huppert
Library Systems and Web Coordinator
Division of Information
R.G. Menzie
You can have a look at The Email Standards Project
http://www.email-standards.org/ for information.
Also, if you want to build a set of guidelines that will work in the future,
you might want to read these two:
Microsoft to ignore web standards in Outlook 2010 - enough is enough
http://www.emai
Hi everyone,
I work in a small web shop in Canada. We have recently been discussing HTML
formatted emails, and accessibility standards or best practices.
We have been struggling a little bit, as we often work with WCAG 1 and 2 as
baseline standards for web page accessibility. However, WCAG standa
Actually is not enough. Accesskey is a good way about the accessibility,
but it's not completed.
I didn't check the latest WCAG and the latest version of screen readers but:
* Keyboards shortcuts depend from the UA (the specifications didn't
define it)
* Users may define preferences keys
* Mo
Hi Bob,
According to Wikipedia, the UK Government recommends accesskey="s" for skip
nav:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Access_key#Use_of_standard_access_key_mappings
Rich
2009/10/29
> *
> WEB STANDARDS GROUP MAIL LIST DIGEST
I always point people to http://blackwidows.co.uk/. The links are accessible
to screen readers and are displayed when they have focus so they are
accessible to sighted users who use keyboard navigation.
_
From: li...@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:li...@webstandardsgroup.org] On
Behalf Of
Might I suggest article from Webaim.org
http://www.webaim.org/techniques/skipnav/
Don't forget about the mobility impaired user as well.
Nancy
On Wed, Oct 28, 2009 at 9:36 AM, designer
wrote:
> Can anyone point me to the best way of providing a 'skip nav' procedure
> which is invisible to sighte
Can anyone point me to the best way of providing a 'skip nav' procedure which
is invisible to sighted readers but is picked up by screen readers? It seems a
can of worms - I've searched and read about it, but (of course) it is
impossible to find out which way is recommended by real world web de
16 matches
Mail list logo