A lapsed designer turned dev turned accessibility engineer / advocate.
I care about inclusive user experiences, help others create inclusive user experiences, and point out a11y gaps.
I'm a self-taught Front End & JS Dev and professional learner with accessibility expertise. I'm passionate about breaking down concepts into relatable concepts, making it more approachable.
A lapsed designer turned dev turned accessibility engineer / advocate.
I care about inclusive user experiences, help others create inclusive user experiences, and point out a11y gaps.
I'm a self-taught Front End & JS Dev and professional learner with accessibility expertise. I'm passionate about breaking down concepts into relatable concepts, making it more approachable.
A lapsed designer turned dev turned accessibility engineer / advocate.
I care about inclusive user experiences, help others create inclusive user experiences, and point out a11y gaps.
I'm a self-taught Front End & JS Dev and professional learner with accessibility expertise. I'm passionate about breaking down concepts into relatable concepts, making it more approachable.
worth noting that ARIA range sliders are presently inaccessible on iOS. :(
I didn't know that, but changing it to a normal range input is high on my to-do list (I think I mentioned it in the post haha).
I got the idea to do that from Able Player
Fairly straight forward to style, but repetitive. And no downsides if altering the styles for screen readers:
scottaohara.github.io/a11y_styled_...
Ana Tudor's got an excellent breakdown into the guts of the element: css-tricks.com/sliding-nightmare-u...
Thanks, Scott! I am going to be playing with it, I have an idea of how I want to do it and I may ping you to see what you think!
Sounds good.
i've been drafting a post / demo on how to do this... but knowing me i might not release that for quite some time :)
LOL I know that feeling, my to-do list is miles long 🙃