a11yproject.com
Sequence
a11yproject.com | Sequence | |
---|---|---|
2 | 2 | |
3,686 | 3,372 | |
0.1% | - | |
6.6 | 0.0 | |
about 1 month ago | over 3 years ago | |
Nunjucks | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
a11yproject.com
-
The A11Y Project Checklist
> The colour contrast of the title section fails all tests.
It doesn't. The background color is --color-blue: #3b4bbf and the SVG's fill color is --color-blue-tint: #d4d8f2, a 5.1:1 contrast ratio.
Having the top-level page titles replicated as such giant SVGs is probably overdoing it but the user also has the page title in the browser tab and the word "Checklist" underlined in the main navigation to locate themselves (the actual h1 heading for the page is visually hidden contains "Checklist."
I didn't find a viewport size/shape that had the overlapping you're describing, maybe their design has a problem they didn't find and you could report it to them [0].
> I also thought uppercase text-transform was best avoided
Do you mean on "Check your WCAG compliance?" Making all the text on a page or full sentences all uppercase can make it hard to read, I don't think you have to pretend `text-transform: uppercase` doesn't exist. It's definitely better to use the property to make text uppercase as a design choice vs. actually writing the text using all capital letters, at least some of the time browsers and assistive technologies can treat them differently.
I think the A11y Project in particular tries to reach designers and developers who often think "accessibility" means making sites plain, boring, and/or ugly. Therefore, they've adopted a design that is more capital "D" Designed on their top-level pages; that may mean not making everything maximally accessible 100% of the time. Additionally, people will always disagree about design choices.
[0] https://github.com/a11yproject/a11yproject.com/
-
CSS Deep
a11yproject/a11yproject.com - Making #A11Y tips and tricks easier to digest and leveraging the community into the cloud.
Sequence
-
How to pay your rent with your open source project
Interesting find, I took a cursory look at their GitHub[1] and they seem to accept PR from outside but I didn't find any explicit mention of copyright transfer; Perhaps because there's no separate version of sequence.js for commercial use(Just use case differentiation).
[1] https://github.com/IanLunn/Sequence
-
CSS Deep
IanLunn/Sequence - The responsive CSS animation framework for creating unique sliders, presentations, banners, and other step-based applications.
What are some alternatives?
fancyInput - Makes typing in input fields fun with CSS3 effects
impress.js - It's a presentation framework based on the power of CSS3 transforms and transitions in modern browsers and inspired by the idea behind prezi.com.
PageLoadingEffects - Modern ways of revealing new content using SVG animations.
Swiper - Most modern mobile touch slider with hardware accelerated transitions
Less - Leaner CSS, in your browser or Ruby (via less.js).
reveal.js - The HTML Presentation Framework
awesome-conferences
slick - the last carousel you'll ever need
css-loaders - A collection of loading spinners animated with CSS
Glide.js - A dependency-free JavaScript ES6 slider and carousel. It’s lightweight, flexible and fast. Designed to slide. No less, no more
SpinKit - A collection of loading indicators animated with CSS
ress - 🚿 A modern CSS reset