Click here to Skip to main content
15,892,005 members

Survey Results

Do you design for accessibility in your apps?

Survey period: 18 Nov 2019 to 25 Nov 2019

Accessibility: "The design of products, devices, services, or environments so as to be usable by people with disabilities" [Wikipedia]

OptionVotes% 
We design for people who are blind (eg screen reader support)588.30
We design for vision impairment (eg size, contrast, colours)9713.88
We design for for people who are deaf (eg captions, visual cues)304.29
We design for hearing impairment (eg volume / tone adjustment)162.29
We design for learning disabilities (eg simplified design, minimal distractions etc)304.29
We design for motor skill disabilities (eg dictation support, control spacing)91.29
We do not design with accessibility in mind55779.69
Respondents were allowed to choose more than one answer; totals may not add up to 100%



 
GeneralCommand-line apps? Pin
PIEBALDconsult20-Nov-19 6:31
mvePIEBALDconsult20-Nov-19 6:31 
GeneralThe Obvious Design Requirement Pin
W Balboos, GHB19-Nov-19 4:54
W Balboos, GHB19-Nov-19 4:54 
GeneralWhat is this "design" of which you speak? Pin
agolddog19-Nov-19 2:42
agolddog19-Nov-19 2:42 
GeneralRe: What is this "design" of which you speak? Pin
Slacker00719-Nov-19 2:48
professionalSlacker00719-Nov-19 2:48 
GeneralKnowledge Impairment - your future self Pin
maze319-Nov-19 1:16
professionalmaze319-Nov-19 1:16 
GeneralI write tools for internal use Pin
Daniel Pfeffer18-Nov-19 23:58
professionalDaniel Pfeffer18-Nov-19 23:58 
GeneralRe: I write tools for internal use Pin
kalberts19-Nov-19 0:34
kalberts19-Nov-19 0:34 
GeneralRe: I write tools for internal use Pin
Peter R. Fletcher19-Nov-19 5:17
Peter R. Fletcher19-Nov-19 5:17 
GeneralRe: I write tools for internal use Pin
Eek Ten Bears21-Nov-19 22:56
Eek Ten Bears21-Nov-19 22:56 
GeneralJust guessing how to do it... Pin
kalberts18-Nov-19 22:40
kalberts18-Nov-19 22:40 
Far too many times have I seen developers claim that they design for accessibility, but without having a clue about how to do it. More or less of the kind: "If this text is too small to read, press this button to enlarge it", in dozen varieties.

Lots of developers have read checklists of how to design for this and that disability. When they sit down at their keyboards, they (vaguely) remember twelve of the twentyfour rules, implement the six that cost next to zero, and proclaim "We have made a serious effort".

The checklist should have had a second column, next to the "Do you design for...", to check "...and we regularly (e.g. for every major release) use people that actually have these disabilities as testers, to verify that the software actually works fine for them". If the developers were truly honest, that would reduce the percentage of those really designing for disabilities to a fraction.

There is a middle-between: You can do some testing yourself, simulating vision problems by smearing vaseline on your glasses, or covering the screen with a big board that has only a small hole that you can move sideways or up and down (tunnel vision), or turn off the screen (total darkness). You can get hold of a braille line - verifying that it shows the right text makes you feel like a first grader leaning his first letter! You can turn down the color saturation to grayscale as a (poor) simulation of color blindness. Use heavy gloves, or mittens, for keyboard input. Turn off the sound, or select e.g. sewage pipe acoustics on your sound card. ...

But few developers do even such testing. The better of them keep the list of twentyfour points to remember handy, and may actually use them as a checklist before release. Yet, for the great majority, it is plain theoretical work, never tested in practice. Compare it to making a major release of source code that has never been passed through a compiler before the release date.

Developers of software specifically aimed at a disabled group are of course different - they have testes with the disabilities in question. I am talking about developers who make software for the general market, with disabled users only as a small fragment of the user group.
GeneralRe: Just guessing how to do it... Pin
theoldfool19-Nov-19 1:10
professionaltheoldfool19-Nov-19 1:10 
GeneralAll of our web apps have to meet standards for the Vision Impaired Pin
Slacker00718-Nov-19 2:03
professionalSlacker00718-Nov-19 2:03 
GeneralRe: All of our web apps have to meet standards for the Vision Impaired Pin
kalberts18-Nov-19 22:47
kalberts18-Nov-19 22:47 
GeneralRe: All of our web apps have to meet standards for the Vision Impaired Pin
Slacker00719-Nov-19 2:15
professionalSlacker00719-Nov-19 2:15 
GeneralRe: All of our web apps have to meet standards for the Vision Impaired Pin
kalberts19-Nov-19 3:09
kalberts19-Nov-19 3:09 
GeneralECU firmware is usually not accessed by any user Pin
den2k8817-Nov-19 22:12
professionalden2k8817-Nov-19 22:12 
GeneralRe: ECU firmware is usually not accessed by any user Pin
KarstenK18-Nov-19 0:46
mveKarstenK18-Nov-19 0:46 
GeneralRe: ECU firmware is usually not accessed by any user Pin
den2k8818-Nov-19 2:01
professionalden2k8818-Nov-19 2:01 
GeneralRe: ECU firmware is usually not accessed by any user Pin
KarstenK18-Nov-19 5:20
mveKarstenK18-Nov-19 5:20 
GeneralColor blindness Pin
Mike (Prof. Chuck)17-Nov-19 19:47
professionalMike (Prof. Chuck)17-Nov-19 19:47 
GeneralRe: Color blindness PinPopular
  Forogar  18-Nov-19 4:44
professional  Forogar  18-Nov-19 4:44 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.