cehfisher / a11y-style-guide

Accessibility (A11Y) Style Guide
http://a11y-style-guide.com/style-guide
MIT License
559 stars 61 forks source link

I don't, but I would love to #273

Closed Christopher-James-Francis-Rodgers closed 3 years ago

Christopher-James-Francis-Rodgers commented 4 years ago

Issue

I would love to be able to find an all-inclusive style guideline for accessibility, and I wonder if you are committed to https://a11y-style-guide.com/style-guide/ being that, and if not, would you please advise us of the best alternative, and simply disregard the following. Thank you, kindly, my friend. ~ Chris

If you are committed to https://a11y-style-guide.com/style-guide/ being a definitive guide, my answer is, "I don't, but I would love to," in response to the question you pose in the header "How do you use this tool?"

In response to the last question you pose after the final bullet-point under that same heading, "What can't you do with it is an easier question?", let me give you an example.

Example

On page... https://a11y-style-guide.com/style-guide/section-navigation.html#kssref-navigation-accordion ... I certainly appreciate you having provided a button "Show Markup for this Example", and the convenient "Copy" button for the code, however, my friend, that code is non-functional, as is, because the CSS that is specific to that example is not 'also' provided.

I assume I would be able to wrangle the example specific CSS out of the source code ...

<link rel="stylesheet" href="kss-assets/kss.css"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="../all/all.css">

... but that is hardly a simple thing to do for beginner website builders to achieve, I think you would agree.

Additional Information

Again, this quickest solution would be if you could enlighten us, the visitors to your site, by posting at the top of every page, a link to a better/more complete resource you may have very likely found by now, seemingly, since your former inspired efforts on the site https://a11y-style-guide.com/style-guide/ seem to have become a thing of the past for you. ...Or do I presume too much, my friend?

"All the best; intended."

Christopher James Francis Rodgers