Surely something like this could be done with a tool that could be run as part of the build process. For example, like FXCop. It could tell you where you don't conform to the necessary requirements and the "lazy" programmers could fix it.
This strikes me as being more a decision of the company involved. If they are interested in catering to a wider audience, they will make the effort for this. If they don't care, they are unlikely to devote resources to it. Of course, I know very little about this sort of thing so this is all opinion :) David "If we can hit that bullseye, the rest of the dominoes will fall like a house of cards... checkmate!" -Zapp Brannigan, Futurama On 12 December 2012 14:07, Katherine Moss <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello guys, > I was just wondering how many of you agree with this. I, who's > desire it is to become an open source .NET Framework programmer, look at all > of the both open source, and not to mention, Microsoft-provided products, and > I can't tell you how much lazy programming I see out there. I'm not calling > you lazy programmers, so please, please don't take it that way. I'm just > saying, that for the masses, and especially for the many blind and visually > impaired users like me who rely on everything being labeled so that screen > readers, or software that converts text on screen to speech, can understand > and provide the right information. Half of the time, I will download a piece > of software whether open source or otherwise, and I will never be able to > utilize it due to nothing being labeled, or some things being labeled and > others not, giving only half the experience to someone hard of seeing like > me. Now, what I am proposing is strong and provocative, but I think that it > could potentially be a good thing if implemented correctly. I think that it > would be a good idea for Visual Studio to have a compilation requirement that > all elements are labeled, and all UIA properties exposable by a control are > implemented. Microsoft themselves are lazy when it comes to that; a lot of > their new interface for Windows server 2012 for instance, has so much > mislabeled and missing UIA content that either screen readers don't read at > all, or they read spurious content, as if they are reading .NET classes, > instead of application-generated, administrator-friendly messages. My friend > thinks that this would only work if Microsoft themselves built this in, and > he may be right. But I definitely think that it should be required on most > open source projects and open source frameworks that all elements be labled > and exposed that way people of all abilities and disabilities alike can > benefit. I don't see how it would work in the commercial sector unless > Microsoft implemented it. Tell me what you guys think. >
