Sorry if I offended you, but I think we’re talking about different things. Fully blind people use screen readers which are designed to read web elements that conform to a certain standard, and going against that standard makes the screenreader behave unexpectedly, which can be confusing for someone reading the page in a linear audio or braille format.
For your situation I’d recommend something like Link Alert on Firefox. This sort of thing should be standard browser behavior, tbh. Putting it on webdevs is bad practice.
No, I’m not offended, I was just pointing to something that didn’t seem right to me.
I don’t know how a screenreader works and what complications can exist in its use, I’m not blind yet, only sometimes I leave the imprint of my nose on the screen. Age does not forgive.
Sorry if I offended you, but I think we’re talking about different things. Fully blind people use screen readers which are designed to read web elements that conform to a certain standard, and going against that standard makes the screenreader behave unexpectedly, which can be confusing for someone reading the page in a linear audio or braille format.
For your situation I’d recommend something like Link Alert on Firefox. This sort of thing should be standard browser behavior, tbh. Putting it on webdevs is bad practice.
No, I’m not offended, I was just pointing to something that didn’t seem right to me. I don’t know how a screenreader works and what complications can exist in its use, I’m not blind yet, only sometimes I leave the imprint of my nose on the screen. Age does not forgive.