On May 25, 2007, at 7:08 AM, Stephen Kelly wrote:
On 25/05/07, Stuart Foulstone [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Since there are increasingly many different browsers/hardware/OS
all of
which will present your design differently, designers actively
styling
pages as they see fit are not
On 22 May 2007, at 15:35:34, Jason Robb wrote:
The main reason I even considered a table is because the anchors
leave an empty space between the images.
This may be heresy, but I think this might be a perfectly legitimate
use of a (properly marked-up) table?
Andrew
109B SE 4th Av
I agree w/ Paul + alt/title tags
Andrew
109B SE 4th Av
Gainesville
FL 32601
Cell: 352-870-6661
http://www.andrewmaben.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
In a well designed user interface, the user should not need
instructions.
On Mar 17, 2007, at 3:44 PM, Paul Novitski wrote:
At 3/17/2007 07:27
On Mar 10, 2007, at 2:07 PM, Designer wrote:
So I repeat : 20 items for sale would have to be:
Buy now,
Buy it now,
etc...
I may be late to the party with this, but I think what they're
looking for would be:
a href=LINK title=Buy TITLE 1 nowBuy Now/a
a href=LINK title=Buy TITLE 2 nowBuy
On Mar 7, 2007, at 11:19 PM, Ricky Onsman wrote:
Observational testing should be required practice for anyone building
websites, I would have thought, especially to explore the practical
applications of implementing standards (which for the record I am
keen on
but a long way from achieving).
On Mar 8, 2007, at 7:48 AM, Bob Schwartz wrote:
First a disclaimer:
This post does not reflect my personal views on web accessibility
or handicapped persons, it is merely a collection of academic
thoughts triggered by various posts of the past few days.
How and why did the web get
On Mar 7, 2007, at 1:29 PM, Designer wrote:
People who use Windows (= the majority) are always creating 'new
windows' on the PC - mail, browser, spreadsheet, help files,
opening files, saving them, printing them etc etc ad inf.
And this is different because . . . ?
Because they are, at
On Feb 28, 2007, at 9:03 PM, Mike Brown wrote:
or even what makes a good usability consultant
Perhaps, but I think what makes for usability itself should be a
concern to us all. What are standards for after all? Is writing valid
code an end in itself, or a means to an end? As I see it, it
Nick Roper wrote:
Hi,
A customer has requested that they should be able to navigate
between input fields on a form by using the Enter key - i.e. to
replicate the action of the Tab key.
I've seen examples of Javascript code to do this, but I'd be
interested in any feedback on whether there
programs use enter to move
between fields? It is actually quite common in very heavy data-
centric applications.
-
---
*From: *Andrew Maben [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Subject: *Re: [WSG] Use of Enter key to naviagte between form fields
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