supported by users' assistive technologies as well as the accessibility features in browsers and other user agents| www.w3.org
Intent| www.w3.org
Intent| www.w3.org
Intent| www.w3.org
Technique G131:Providing descriptive labels| www.w3.org
Accessibility consultancy with a focus on inclusion. We can help you with knowledge, experience, strategy, assessments, and development.| TetraLogical
Accessibility consultancy with a focus on inclusion. We can help you with knowledge, experience, strategy, assessments, and development.| TetraLogical
HTML| html.spec.whatwg.org
Categories:Flow content.Phrasing content.If the type attribute is not in the Hidden state: Interactive content.If the type attribute is not in the Hidden state: Listed, labelable, submittable, resettable, and autocapitalize-and-autocorrect inheriting form-associated element.If the type attribute is in the Hidden state: Listed, submittable, resettable, and autocapitalize-and-autocorrect inheriting form-associated element.If the type attribute is not in the Hidden state: Palpable content.Contex...| html.spec.whatwg.org
Accessibility resources free online from the international standards organization: W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI).| Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
In our fifth and final post from our browsing with assistive technology series, we discuss browsing with speech recognition. You can also explore browsing with a desktop screen reader, browsing with a mobile screen reader, browsing with a keyboard, and browsing with screen magnification.| TetraLogical
In our fourth post from our browsing with assistive technology series, we discuss browsing with screen magnification. You can also explore browsing with a desktop screen reader, browsing with a mobile screen reader, browsing with a keyboard, and browsing with speech recognition.| TetraLogical
In our first post from our browsing with assistive technologies series, we discuss desktop screen readers. You can also explore browsing with a mobile screen reader, browsing with a keyboard, browsing with screen magnification and browsing with speech recognition.| TetraLogical
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) are a set of recommendations for making websites and apps accessible to people with disabilities. This article explains WCAG and how to use them.| TetraLogical