Browser: Inclusive approaches suggest that there is no absolute solution to the problem of accessibility for everyone, but you should at least try to test your pages with as many versions of Internet Explorer, Opera and Netscape on as many different operating systems as you can. You want to know how your pages would look on Web TV and Lynx The applicant who specifies a specific browser for viewing will NQ.
Coding language: In order to produce a usable and accessible web design, it is necessary to adopt strongly user-centered design practices. It is important to be able to modify and refine the interface iteratively, combining both design steps and usability evaluations, which typically involve measurement against known performance criteria. Nielsen gives an account of the use of such criteria in a method known as heuristic evaluation.
Could Helen Keller read your creation? The "line-at-a-time" approach of screen-reader software complicates navigation on text lines that contain multiple hyperlinks (such as navigation bars). Thus, in an ideal world, accommodating visually impaired readers would move an author to place each link on its own separate line. But individual lines for each link can make for long scrolling pages, which, in turn, compromises navigation speed for sighted readers. So an inclusive approach might be as shown below.
<TD>Text Index<BR></TD>
<TD>Site Search<BR></TD>
<TD>Feedback<BR></TD>
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