- From: Mads Felskov Agersten <mads@felskov-aps.dk>
- Date: Wed, 7 Jun 2023 14:41:32 +0200
- To: public-aria-practices@w3.org
- Message-ID: <CADvdD+UNuycQtYcjLyEPCH6H-wF=Np8MHkVkxQmOLuOoOGcDTw@mail.gmail.com>
Hi I've been reading your ARIA Authoring Practices Guide with great interest, and in general I gotta applaud you for the effort you've made. The information is easily digestible and goes into sufficient technical details for me to be able to translate it into actual code that fits our needs. I have one request tho - would it not make sense to write some guides on how to actually use assistive technologies to test our implementations? You often write that it's important to test what we create, but at the current point I feel like I have a lot of insight into how *to write* accessible code, but my knowledge about how to actually use accessible technologies *to test* my integrations is very limited. I would love to read some guides on how this is actually used by users with different disabilities, so that I could learn how to use these tools to properly test my solutions and verify that the improve UX for all users :) -- De bedste hilsner Mads Felskov Agersten Felskov ApS Lyngby Hovedgade 44C, st.th. 2800 Kgs. Lyngby Telefon: (+45) 2671 9792
Received on Thursday, 8 June 2023 09:16:39 UTC