The tempertemper newsletter logo

The tempertemper newsletter

Subscribe
Archives
May 31, 2022

πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ Inclusivity and HTML – May's roundup

It's June tomorrow, which means the beginning of Pride Month; a time to celebrate how far we've come with civil rights, but a reminder that we still have a long way to go. Not Pride related, but definitely about inclusivity, here are the articles I wrote for you in May:

  1. Sometimes when it’s false, it’s true
  2. Booleans in ARIA
  3. XHTML syntax is still worth using

From the archives

HTML is great. ARIA can be handy too. But it bears repeating that semantic HTML does almost all the accessibility heavy lifting without a single ARIA attribute or line of JavaScript. Last year, I wrote about the case of a bunch of unnecessary code being used on a href-less <a> element, where just adding the href attribute would have done all that work automatically.

Elsewhere on the web

Here are some more interesting articles from around the web that I read during May:

  • Additional β€œassistance”, where it's explained how, with the best intentions, we can overcomplicate simple things for the benefit of pretty much nobody
  • Please, stop disabling zoom – friends don’t let friends disable pinch-to-zoom on their websites!
  • Toilets – a really good example of when well intentioned but under-informed able people design for disabled people
  • Divs are bad! – The <div> element has no semantic meaning, but that doesn’t mean it can be used just any old place
  • A preview of new accessibility features coming from Apple

Anyway, I hope you manage to get out and join your local Pride celebrations! See you again at the end of June 🌈

Don't miss what's next. Subscribe to The tempertemper newsletter:
Powered by Buttondown, the easiest way to start and grow your newsletter.