I don't think that pressing enter to submit is an accessibility issue
at all, it's simply expected behaviour. If people are used to being
able to do that in their browser then it should not be forced or
suppressed in any way.
Keyboard only users is an interesting one... so if the person is
It is impossible to get a div sitting on top of flash in all browsers. Your
best bet is to hide the flash while your overlay is showing and show it when
it hides again. If the blank space where your flash was will be obvious you
could set a background image similar-looking to the flash on it's
Well we've been working on a global sign in and registration system for some
time now and the conclusion we've come to with the T's C's is to not
include it in the page by default - have a link to it and hope that when the
user clicks back their user agent will repopulate the fields (as most seem
Good evening folks,
Does anyone know a good method of wrapping the text of multiple
paragraphs around a single (large) image? It's possible I'm having a
brain malfunction but I can't think of a good way to do it. All I can
come up with is:
1) Combine all paragraphs into one and separate
the text into a div but surely there's a
better way without the extra markup...
Mark
On 14 Aug 2008, at 18:36, Mark Stickley wrote:
Good evening folks,
Does anyone know a good method of wrapping the text of multiple
paragraphs around a single (large) image? It's possible I'm having
I wonder what a partially sighted user would thing of these 'improvements'.
Would they be glad that now they can see images a little easier and the
layout seems to break less or would they be annoyed at the sudden appearance
of a horizontal scrollbar?
On Thu, Jul 3, 2008 at 2:14 PM, James Leslie
:
--
*From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] *On
Behalf Of *Mark Stickley
*Sent:* 03 July 2008 14:56
*To:* wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
*Subject:* Re: [WSG] Browsers and Zooming
I wonder what a partially sighted user would thing of these
'improvements'. Would