Hi Hans,
lynx no more suppresses site content, than a monitor refuses to show
material.
All lynx can do is give you what the site designer has used in their
code.
If the person drafting the site decides to use techniques that do not
respond to the keyboard, do not create active links try to do something
loopy like a sort of dynamic element, it is not the fault of lynx.
In fact you may wish to contact the people behind this site and inform
them. Especially since lynx is often used by those in their market.
Does this make sense?
Remember the references to the Internet as a super highway.
Lynx is just a car, if someone leaves pot holes in the road, one does not
blame the car for this yes?
Happy to help,
Kare
On Thu, 15 Sep 2016, Hans wrote:
Hi Karen,
I tried as you described. However, this showed me the word "Treiber" but your
better hint was the one with the letter "l". That way I can see, these links
are hidden and could navigate to it (it is letter 107 here).
Gowever, it does not explain, why lynx suppresses these. Ok, these are hidden,
but accessible, so lynx should be able to acccess them.
Maybe it is still configurationable, I will try once more.
Thanks for your help, it makes things clearer.
Best
Hans
Hi Hans,
Okay, here is what I just did to reach that area.
Indeed you are correct, especially if you have the links are numbered
option turned on, there is no clear way to reach the drivers area.
However lynx will display and allow you to reach hidden links on a page.
Once you go through the steps providing the content on this site, choose
the l key as in the letter l.
You are presented in order the links on the page, starting with the
visible ones.
Now, if you use the search function, /
and enter the word hidden, you are taken to the list of hidden links on
the page, including one for the drivers.
with links are numbered turned on, at least for me, it is number 114.
activate the hidden link option for the drivers and you are taken to the
page where they are listed.
Does this make sense?
Kare