Link to sectionAccessibility Experience & Sentiment
The accessibility features mentioned in this year's survey proved to be straightforward enough to use, which translated into a very low negative sentiment overall.
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Εμπειρία
- Το έχω χρησιμοποιήσει: Respondents who have used an item.
- Το έχω ακουστά: Respondents who have heard about an item, but haven't used it.
- Δεν το έχω ακουστά: Respondents who have never heard about an item.
Γνώμη
- Θετική: Συμμετέχοντες οι οποίοι ενδιαφέρονται να μάθουν περισσότερα για μία τεχνολογία, ή θα ήθελαν να την ξαναχρησιμοποιήσουν.
- Ουδέτερη: Συμμετέχοντες οι οποίοι δεν έδειξαν κάποιο συναίσθημα για μία τεχνολογία.
- Αρνητική: Συμμετέχοντες οι οποίοι δεν ενδιαφέρονται να μάθουν περισσότερα για μία τεχνολογία, ή την έχουν χρησιμοποιήσει και είχαν αρνητική εμπειρία.
Link to sectionUser Disabilities
It was comforting to see developers account for a wide range of disabilities while making websites, with visual disabilities taking the top ranks.
Link to sectionOther Accessibility Techniques
It's nice to see that alt text is widely implemented, and if nothing else this chart can serve as a handy shortlist of accessibility patterns to implement in your own projects.
Link to sectionScreen Readers
It should come as no surprise that developers are more likely to use screenreaders if they come bundled with their browser or OS.
Link to sectionAccessibility Tools
Lighthouse and browser devtools in general topped the rankings, overtaking more specialized tools such as Axe or WAVE.
Link to sectionAccessibility Pain Points
Accessibility presents a unique challenge in that developers must not only overcome technical issues such as testing difficulties, but also organizational obstacles such as low prioritization or lack of client demand.