ahhh fair!!! Unfortunately only the page title. Elsewhere in the document it's not annotated
the <a href="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jart/cosmopolitan/667ab245fe0326972b7da52a95da97125d61c8cf/ape/ape.S">αcτµαlly pδrταblε εxεcµταblε</a> format
"which implements the alpha-see-tau-micro-alpha-lly P-delta-alpha-R-tau-A-B-L-epsilon..." etc.
Contrasted with a foreign language document which we would expect to be either read out in the foreign language, or mechnically translated and then read it.
The HTML is accessible:
No, that should be an ARIA label. Specifically NOT a `title` attribute.
A title provides additional (not redundant) info and browsers and assistive technologies implement the attribute differently.
The whole page is written in beautiful HTML also (probably by hand?)
Sure looks handwritten to me. I guess "beautiful" is subjective; the <center> element being deprecated is not.
ahhh fair!!! Unfortunately only the page title. Elsewhere in the document it's not annotated
still obnoxious though imho
Why, do the people with the screen reader have some specific need to read the title of this article? As if it's some important resource or something?
It's just one irrelevant thing they can't read, same as millions of articles written in different languages...
Because the title tells you what the whole page is about. You can know when to continue or not sometimes with just the title.
Unforuntatly screen readers will read it out as
"which implements the alpha-see-tau-micro-alpha-lly P-delta-alpha-R-tau-A-B-L-epsilon..." etc.
Contrasted with a foreign language document which we would expect to be either read out in the foreign language, or mechnically translated and then read it.
Users with or without screen readers could reasonably expect to read plain text.