Andrew Freedman wrote:
James Jeffery provided the following information on 30/04/2008 12:27 AM:
that will mean that users without CSS will get a bunch of images in a list

You have users that block CSS??

I have never come across that. Can you give an instance as to where and why you would cater for these visitors?

Perhaps not block, but who substitute your css for one of their own which is better for their browsing experience. It may be a high contrast big text version to help with poor vision, it may be something that expands the clickable field around an object (by increasing external padding - to be honest, I don't even know if that's possible) if they have mobility issues, or they may just have a fascination for purple and beige as their link colours. I don't think you can ever assume that a user is going to use your css as you intended.

I turn off css all the time when I'm testing for accessibility - always have.

mark


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