Il lun, 2004-06-28 alle 19:59, Daniel O'Donnell ha scritto:
So is the feeling that providing, say, a stylesheet that handles the most important visually impaired demands (e.g. underlining and whatnot) is a good idea? Or should that also be left up to users, who may have unusual needs and well-developed personal stylesheets?
Again, I think that catering for special needs, or simply trying to conform to accessibility guidelines, should be the developer's task, on the basis of the anticipated audience. And you can also see why imposing choices on the users is a bad idea: while you probably should keep in mind accessibility everywhere, it could make sense to propose a special version of your site (lighter on resources, for instance, or conceived for PDA browsers, etc.), but if you already have to propose a version for "normal", standard-complying browsers, and another for IE, this probably is not feasible, or would result in a scarcely maintainable site.
Ciao