Developers, stop the embarrassment - UX Collective

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A guide through the most common violations in WebAIM’s Million Report for 2023

Daniel BerryhillUX Collective

A man covering his face.

Introduction

The WebAIM’s Million Report is a web accessibility test of the top million home pages. As I mentioned in my last article, the results are embarrassing.

If you want to see how your site would do, enter your URL in WebAIM’s WAVE tool.

If you make the changes listed here, you’ll have better accessibility than most of the top one million sites on the web.

Low contrast text

Time required to find a compliant color: ~ 10 seconds

Usually, an accessibility tool will detect this, but not always — especially if you’re using a gradient color or some other nonsense.

If you’re in Chrome or Edge, you can easily determine if text has a sufficient color contrast and get a suggested value if it doesn’t. NOTE: To my knowledge, Firefox doesn’t have this feature — though it will tell you that a color is not compliant.

Inspect the text (Right-click over the text and click “Inspect” from the context menu). Let’s try it on the “Forgot password?” link for Facebook’s home page:

Screenshot of Facebook’s home page with the context menu displaying for the “Forgot password?” link. The “Inspect” menu item is highlighted.

Ensure the <a> element for the “Forgot password?” link is highlighted in your Developer Tools. Look at the Styles:

Screenshot of Chrome Developer Tools with the “Styles” tab selected and highlighted. An arrow is pointing to the “color” style.

Look at the top-most color style. In this case, it’s from the selector ._8icy ._6ltj a (yeah, whatever those classes mean) with a value of #1877F2.

Click the blue square for the color value and you’ll see a color picker dialog:

Screenshot of color picker dialog in Chrome’s Developer Tools. The HEX value is “#1877f2”. There is text that reads “Contrast ratio 4.23” with a “ban” icon next to it.

You’ll notice that it tells you right here that the color contrast doesn’t meet the minimum 4.5:1 ratio. The text…

Resumir
The WebAIM’s Million Report is a web accessibility test of the top million home pages, revealing embarrassing results. One common violation is low contrast text, which may not always be detected by accessibility tools. Chrome and Edge offer a feature to determine color contrast and get suggested values, while Firefox lacks this feature. Inspecting the text in Developer Tools can help identify the color style and check the contrast ratio. For example, on Facebook’s home page, the color contrast for the “Forgot password?” link does not meet the minimum 4.5:1 ratio, as indicated in the color picker dialog.