@a11yMel
I didn't go this deep then but last year I looked for some information about street signs to make a web one.
I don't remember why, obviously it was for Halloween, but I don't think I actually used it for anything.
@a11yMel
I didn't go this deep then but last year I looked for some information about street signs to make a web one.
I don't remember why, obviously it was for Halloween, but I don't think I actually used it for anything.
@a11yMel
This is a great day.
Is Overpass the closest to "Standard Alphabets" (aka Highway Gothic) on Google Fonts?
RoadGeek 2014 is an accurate, open source font you can host yourself.
Other details:
* It looks like the M4-8P detour sign uses a different font than M4-9 & M4-10R/L (there are different series of the Standard Alphabet typeface).
* "Clearview" is a "Standard Alphabet" alternative but only for white text.
* In print, the background orange color is Pantone 152.
* I'm glad the current version of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices is in an accessible PDF but why did they stop making it available in HTML?
Overpass is a free, Open Source typeface designed by Delve Fonts. The design of Overpass is an interpretation of the well-known “Highway Gothic” letterforms fro
Google Fonts (fonts.google.com)
A set of fonts replicating various road sign typefaces. - sammdot/roadgeek-fonts
GitHub (github.com)
@chriskirknielsen @mahryekuh
Kevin Powell recently made a video about a use case for turning off inheritance for a custom property.
@MerriNet
If you click on a link, focus *shouldn't* be on the link, it should be on the link's destination.
Somewhat ironically, as browsers have added the `:focus-visible` pseudo-class, they've also adopted Safari's approach of using heuristics to differentiate pointer-triggered focus vs. keyboard-triggered, making most use of `:focus-visible` unnecessary.
@mahryekuh
@yatil @a11yMel
Does it not fix the issue because there's no support for it?
How is it meant to work? Is the accessibility tree supposed to have two names for things, the name and the Braille name? Are AT supposed to parse the DOM themselves and override the name in the tree with the `aria-braillelabel` value?
Don't some people use a braille display while listening to a screen reader? Maybe that's no worse than seeing visual differences to what a screen reader says.
@westbrook
I guess Apple's policy is "`is` for me but not for thee."