On Oct 30, 2007, at 5:56 AM, willdonovan wrote:
I dont seem to get any of the flicking effects that everyone is
talking about.
I'm using Firefox 2.0.0.8
Hi William, thanks for checking. It was eliminated :)
This site has something similar to what I did - I think I must have
gotten the
on the topic of skip links and semantic styling, and to add to the mix
of usability, accessibility and getting into the habit of best practice,
Accessibility is not just for the impaired, it is also for people who
access through different devices where CSS has not been styled to suite
what i
I dont seem to get any of the flicking effects that everyone is talking
about.
I'm using Firefox 2.0.0.8
William
Gunlaug Sørtun wrote:
Tee G. Peng wrote:
teesworks.com/
Been working on this site in the last 2 days, I find that I am
getting so annoyed by the "surprise' everytime the ho
Stuart Foulstone wrote:
That may well be true, but irrelevant to this discussion.
Tee was enlarging the clickable area of a "skip to content" link with the
intention of making it easier to use.
oops, right you are. must stop reading emails out of context and jumping
at things. apologies,
P
Georg, thank you so much!
IE6 displayed correctly except the header problem I wrote. I did a
lot of tweaking in the main stylesheet after my post , and didn't get
to check on IE6. You saw the 'wrong version' :), but I notice the
header's reloads disappered now the right column sits below t
On Sun, October 28, 2007 6:38 pm, Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
> Stuart Foulstone wrote:
>> But the point is that, this accessibility feature is for people who
>> can't
>> use a mouse - i.e. they cannot "click" anywhere.
>
> In general parlance, "click" has become the general term for "activate".
> Key
"Most disabled users, particularly sight impaired, will use your header
markup to navigate the page rather than skip links"
Really? How will they do that? And what makes you believe that this is the
case?
"...an accessible browser like Firefox which allows them to display a header
list..."
No it
Philippe Wittenbergh wrote:
A compromise solution I have used: when a client doesn't want them, hide
them (position them of screen, not display:none), but make them visible
when those links are focussed (by pressing the tab key).
Yup, I've used that approach on www.salford.ac.uk and it works
Stuart Foulstone wrote:
But the point is that, this accessibility feature is for people who can't
use a mouse - i.e. they cannot "click" anywhere.
In general parlance, "click" has become the general term for "activate".
Keyboard users won't walk away offended by the use of that term (just
the
Tee G. Peng wrote:
Georg, can you kindly take a look on IE6? The horizontal menu
doesn't load smoothly, when the page is fully loaded, the header's
part reloads, I suspect it has to do with the clear both class yet I
can't figure a fix for IE (tried all tricks from hasLayout)
The page loa
On Oct 28, 2007, at 3:56 AM, Stuart Foulstone wrote:
But the point is that, this accessibility feature is for people who
can't
use a mouse - i.e. they cannot "click" anywhere.
Ah yah right A good point you have made. I am a 'mouse' user, and
I do find skip to (content/navigation) use
But the point is that, this accessibility feature is for people who can't
use a mouse - i.e. they cannot "click" anywhere.
On Sun, October 28, 2007 6:46 am, Tee G. Peng wrote:
>
>
> John said don't use display:block. Actually the very reason I used it
> is because I want a user able to click on a
Hi!
Tee G. Peng skrev:
Thanks to your influences, it has become my second nature to have 'skip
to content'
I use to do it the other way around, having the content first in source
and using a link to get to the navigation. And then I simply put a link
to the "menu", not anything about skipp
I agree with you: the 'hover' technique is way more annoying, and
it will annoy way more people.
Thanks all for your response. I now can clearly see I got myself
carried away by my 'try-to-do-thing-right' little obsession :)
Ok, three of you said "skip to content is of little use in t
Tee G. Peng wrote:
teesworks.com/
Been working on this site in the last 2 days, I find that I am
getting so annoyed by the "surprise' everytime the hover pops up.
If I, the site builder, find it annoying, what will the users find ?
As a user I find that kind of "visual flicker" highly ann
At 7:44 PM -0700 10/27/07, Tee G. Peng wrote:
I am having an issue and I can't seem to see the whole picture objectively.
Thanks to your influences, it has become my second nature to have
'skip to content' in every site I do (sites I have control over the
design and layout); when I do markup
Been working on this site in the last 2 days, I find that I am getting
so annoyed by the "surprise' everytime the hover pops up. There is no
way to miss it everytime I move the cursor to the top.
Leaving aside considerations as to whether you should actually be
bothering after the client h
On Oct 28, 2007, at 11:44 AM, Tee G. Peng wrote:
... so I came out with this technique:
teesworks.com/ (move your mouse to the top to see the result).
Haven't show it to client yet. Been working on this site in the
last 2 days, I find that I am getting so annoyed by the "surprise'
everytim
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