this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2023
5 points (100.0% liked)

Blind Main

481 readers
7 users here now

The main community at rblind.com, for discussion of all things blindness.

You can find the rules for this community, and all other communities we run, here: https://ourblind.com/comunity-guidelines/ Lemmy specifics: By participating on the rblind.com Lemmy server, you are able to participate on other communities not run, controlled, or hosted by us. When doing so, you are expected to abide by all of the rules of those communities, in edition to also following the rules linked above. Should the rules of another community conflict with our rules, so long as you are participating from the rblind.com website, our rules take priority. Should we receive complaints from other instances or communities that you are repeatedly, knowingly, and maliciously breaking there rules, we may take moderator action against you, even if your posts comply with all of the rblind.com rules linked above.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I'm not blind and just want to know so I don't do the sort of stuff that may make it difficult for screen reader. So it just made me wonder what are best way to make any of the post/images more accessible for screen readers which I imagine blind users commonly use?

I have tried to add alt-texts to most my images but I wasn't sure if there's more stuff I could do and also unlearn to make it easy on you

(@main@rblind.com) #blind #accessible

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] retronautickz@fedi196.gay 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

@matty

Apart from adding alt text.

  • Casing of multi-word tags: Always write the first letter of each word on a hashtag containing several word uppercase. This way screen readers and TTS software can interpret and read them as separated words. Otherwise it would read them as one nonsensical word

  • Avoid fancy/special fonts: Screen readers/TTS software can't read them as letters.

  • I don't think it's going to be a problem here, but wordle is a nightmare for Screen readers/TTS software as they can't detect the words and only describe the squares one by one. It's better to screenshot it and add an explanation of the results in alt text.