- From: Richard Caloggero <rcaloggero@bhcc.state.ma.us>
- Date: Mon, 28 Jun 1999 11:08:02 -0400
- To: "'Kynn Bartlett'" <kynn-hwg@idyllmtn.com>
- Cc: "'WAI List'" <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
Is netscape really broken when it comes to changing colors and fonts etc. Both netscape and ie have ways of setting colors for text background links etc, and for fonts, different from those set by the page author. I've varified that this does work with ie, but can't seem to convince netscape to do this. Rich -----Original Message----- From: Kynn Bartlett [SMTP:kynn-hwg@idyllmtn.com] Sent: Thursday, June 24, 1999 3:49 PM To: Steve Donie Cc: Anne Pemberton; w3c-wai-ig@w3.org Subject: Link Colors (more usability than accessibility) At 12:41 PM 6/24/1999 , Steve Donie wrote: >Minor nit to pick - it looks like you have chosen your own link color and >visited-link color. For me (using IE 5) it turns out that the colors you >have chosen are the _opposite_ of the default colors (that is, your link >color is the default visited-link color, and your visited-link color is the >default link color). >Makes things kinda confusing at first, because initially it looks to me like >I've visited all the links! Good point -- I noticed this myself a while ago. Link color is a very subtle but valuable tool that web surfers rely on. Whenever possible you should _not_ change the link colors; it's worse to change inline link colors than to change a menubar link color. As an example, please see the HTML Writers Guild's web site at: http://www.hwg.org/ We have deliberately chosen to use blue links and purple visited links because this is what many users expect. (The link colors for the left menu bar are changed, however, since they serve a different purpose and clearly are a navigation structure, while inline links are a different story.) This increases the usability of the site by taking advantage of the fact that nearly every web user who uses a graphical browser is familiar with "blue is unvisited, purple is visited." If you're going to change the link colors, you need to be careful how you do it -- make sure that the most obvious color is the "unvisited" one, and something more subdued is the "visited". Squint at your page or run it through the Greeker and see what colors stand out the most. Never, ever, ever do what was done on this page -- never use blue and purple BUT REVERSED. That will only serve to drive web users insane. If you're going to use blue and purple as link colors, you MUST use them in the "normal" way or else you are seriously damaging the usability of your site. -- Kynn Bartlett mailto:kynn@hwg.org President, HTML Writers Guild http://www.hwg.org/ AWARE Center Director http://aware.hwg.org/
Received on Monday, 28 June 1999 11:11:07 UTC