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Re: [GNU Herds service]: HTML + CSS + JavaScript-as-not-required-additio
From: |
Davi Leal |
Subject: |
Re: [GNU Herds service]: HTML + CSS + JavaScript-as-not-required-addition |
Date: |
Fri, 13 Apr 2007 11:19:37 +0200 (CEST) |
Victor Engmark wrote:
> Davi Leal wrote:
> The GNU Herds service could offer a set-of-option, as previously commented
> > by Antenore. Choose any combination of the below options:
[...]
> Whoah, that's a lot of work. I propose a different, bottom-up approach,
> which I think will be less work and fulfill a+b without the need for any
> others. The following should be done for each form:
>
[...]
>
> Voil�! Working JS and non-JS forms, accessible and flexible.
>
> * The point of this is to make sure nobody is scared off by the forms the
> first time they see them. I believe the "nice to have" fields should be
> hidden by default, but for the optional ones it depends on how big the form
> will be with them. Maybe they could always be shown.
> > But the main point is know what the *users* want. It depends on the
> > 'kind' of user:
[...]
> I strongly disagree. There are plenty of users which for various reasons
> won't / can't use JavaScript:
>
> - Security policies / paranoia.
> - Using a non-graphical browser, e.g. voice, braille, or text.
> - Using a light-weight browser, e.g., on a mobile phone or PDA.
> - Using a browser with a broken JavaScript implementation (IE,
> anyone?)
You got me.
Just a comment: About mobile phones, I have noted Google has a totally
different interface, with the heading removed, etc., etc. And they send
all the markup in only one line of text!.
> Some reasons why a CLI application is a bad idea:
>
> - Lots of duplicated work.
> - Many open source enthusiasts and developers are still using Windows
> primarily. Some OSS projects, like TortoiseCVS, are Windows-only.
> - If someone is unwilling to enable JavaScript or get a
> JavaScript-enabled browser to view our site, why would they go
> through the bother of installing our application?
Yeah, installing the app sucks. Users of job sites are not used to install
an app to access the service of a website.
> In conclusion, by building bottom-up, we make sure anyone can use the forms,
> and that people with JavaScript and CSS support get a nice experience. On
> the contrary, by locking onto JavaScript, we would completely exclude some
> people, and break accessibility laws in several countries, including
> the U.S..
Now, I agree with you.
Davi
- Re: "HTML 4.01 Transitional" validated pages, Davi Leal, 2007/04/05
- Re: "HTML 4.01 Transitional" validated pages, MJ Ray, 2007/04/06
- Re: The JobOffer.php is not "HTML 4.01 Transitional" valid, Davi Leal, 2007/04/06
- Re: The JobOffer.php is not "HTML 4.01 Transitional" valid, MJ Ray, 2007/04/10
- Re: JavaScript-enabled required -- bug?, Davi Leal, 2007/04/11
- Re: The JobOffer.php is not "HTML 4.01 Transitional" valid, Victor Engmark, 2007/04/11
- Re: [GNU Herds service]: Set of options: JavaScript (yes/no), AJAX, CLI app, desktop app, ..., Davi Leal, 2007/04/12
- Re: [GNU Herds service]: Set of options: JavaScript (yes/no), AJAX, CLI app, desktop app, ..., Victor Engmark, 2007/04/13
- Re: [GNU Herds service]: HTML + CSS + JavaScript-as-not-required-addition,
Davi Leal <=
- Re: [GNU Herds service]: HTML + CSS + JavaScript-as-not-required-addition, Victor Engmark, 2007/04/13