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#11
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In message <op.syuctzjq3jnr2w-wnt (AT) tbdata (DOT) com>, William Tasso spamblocked (AT) tbdata (DOT) com> writes ... Did you get sufficient replies elsewhere (I only subscribe to alt.html.web-accessibility) to arrive at a conclusion? You've seen all the replies ;-( |
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I guess I'll stick to 'perceived wisdom' ... i.e. a 'skip to main content' link at the start of every page (if necessary). |
#12
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In message <op.syuctzjq3jnr2w-wnt (AT) tbdata (DOT) com>, William Tasso spamblocked (AT) tbdata (DOT) com> writes Jake <jake (AT) gododdin (DOT) demon.co.uk> wrote: ... My interest is really in what people who need to use assistive technology think, rather than what people who design the sites *think* they need. Thanks for posting, unfortunately replies from site builders are most common. It would appear to a casual observer that those in need of assistive technology are satisfied with the service they receive from web sites in general. Did you get sufficient replies elsewhere (I only subscribe to alt.html.web-accessibility) to arrive at a conclusion? You've seen all the replies ;-( I guess I'll stick to 'perceived wisdom' ... i.e. a 'skip to main content' link at the start of every page (if necessary). Regards. |
#13
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The conventional layout of a Web page has the menu appearing as the first entry, with the main content following. Perceived wisdom is that the first item on a page should, therefore, be a 'skip to content' link so that frequent visitors can bypass the repetitive menu system on each page, but can still quickly access the menu when they want to by simply going to the beginning of the page using, for example, the [Home] key. One suggestion that is sometimes made is that the main content should be placed first, followed by the menu. In this way there is no need for a 'skip' link at the beginning of the page -- although one thought is that you now need a 'skip to navigation' link as the first page entry ;-) If there is no link, then the user would presumably have to jump to the end of the page and tab back through the links in the menu. What would be your preference? Menu first -- or last -- on a page? Or doesn't it really matter because that's not how you work anyway? (e.g. use of 'list-of-links' for navigation) And as a subsidiary question: how useful would it be to set up a jump to menu or content via an Access Key? Thanks -- Jake (jake (AT) gododdin (DOT) demon.co.uk -- just a 'spam trap' mail address) |
#14
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If I could take a few minutes of your time, I wonder if the sight-impaired amongst you could comment on my thoughts regarding menu and main content access on a Web page: The conventional layout of a Web page has the menu appearing as the first entry, with the main content following. Perceived wisdom is that the first item on a page should, therefore, be a 'skip to content' link so that frequent visitors can bypass the repetitive menu system on each page, but can still quickly access the menu when they want to by simply going to the beginning of the page using, for example, the [Home] key. One suggestion that is sometimes made is that the main content should be placed first, followed by the menu. In this way there is no need for a 'skip' link at the beginning of the page -- although one thought is that you now need a 'skip to navigation' link as the first page entry ;-) If there is no link, then the user would presumably have to jump to the end of the page and tab back through the links in the menu. What would be your preference? Menu first -- or last -- on a page? Or doesn't it really matter because that's not how you work anyway? (e.g. use of 'list-of-links' for navigation) And as a subsidiary question: how useful would it be to set up a jump to menu or content via an Access Key? Thanks -- Jake (jake (AT) gododdin (DOT) demon.co.uk -- just a 'spam trap' mail address) |
#15
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I sure wish when they design web pages they would set them up exactly just like you described. |
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