50 hot to touch accessible web design tips - the tips no web developer can live without
E-book Contents
- Welcome and thanks
- publisher information
- about jim byrne
- 1. Design for machines first, people second!
- 2. Test the accessibility of your web page with your own web browser.
- 3. Use relative units when setting css text sizes
- 4. Don't rely on colour alone to provide important information
- 5. Ensure links work when javascript doesn't
- 6. Link text should describe the content linked to
- 7. Html 4.01 Is the final version of html and it will be around for a while yet
- 8. Introduce yourself to the web content accessibility guidelines
- 9. Add a full stop to end of alt attributes and list items
- 10. Making pdfs more accessible
- 11. Add alt attributes to spacer images
- 12. Make forms easier to use by creating a logical tab order
- 13. Give visitors your content first (not your navigation)
- 14. Accessible web design is not about creating boring sites
- 15. Provide additional keyboard access to your web pages
- 16. Expand your use of abbreviations and acronyms
- 17. Make a start on those 'legacy' pages
- 18. Get your 'character encoding' sorted
- 20. Don't try to control visitors to you site
- 21. Add structural meaning to image based headings
- 22. Decide whether your non-text elements are functional, decorative or providing content?
- 23. How to make printable characters between adjacent links invisible
- 24. Use absolute size keywords to set the text size on your pages
- 25. Use favelets to check validation and accessibility of your web pages
- 26. Structure your menus by marking them up as lists
- 27. Use html attributes, or css to set web page colors, but don't use both
- 28. If you need help, ask an expert!
- 29. Understanding colour contrast and accessibility
- 30. Use alternative style sheets to give users control of critical elements such as text size or colour on your web pages
- 32. Check colour contrast by creating a greyscale image of your web page
- 33. Make html pages created from ms word more accessible
- 34. Use the free waizilla accessibility checker
- 35. Use acrobot to catch you acronyms and abbreviations
- 36. Get the web accessibility toolbar for internet explorer
- 37. Adding tags to pdf documents improves accessible
- 38. Use javascript to add default text to input fields
- 39. Download ready-made style sheets to meet your access needs
- 40. Associate form fields explicitly with their labels
- 41. Layout your forms using css instead of tables
- 42. Web accessibility for deaf people - adding captions or providing transcripts isn't always enough
- 43. Don't rely on automated tools for checking web accessibility
- 44. Don't use the statistics defence as a reason to exclude people from your content
- 46. When a link falls at the end of a sentence always put the full stop outside the anchor tag
- 47. Start with the assumption that you cannot predict the access needs of your audience
- 48. How to get your xhtml pages to validate when using blockquote
- 49. What is the object element for? And what's it got to do with accessibility?
- 50. How to hide a flash movie from screen readers and keyboard users
- 51. How to make client-side image maps accessible
- 52. Develop your sites for a standard compliant browser first then modify for ie/win
- 53. How to make your pages validate when they include urls with ampersands (&'s) in them
- 54. The flash satay method to embed flash in your pages and support standards
- 55. Use a content management system that helps you build an accessible website
Accessible web design tutorials, books and articles
Don't forget to check out my tutorials, books and articles about accessible web design. Lovingly crafted for your consumption.
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