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UI toolkits and the accessibility gap - Seirdy
How does Warp stack against other toolkits when it comes to accessibility and system integration? In my system settings I set colors, default fonts (with
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First Seen: 03/11/2024
Last Indexed: 10/21/2024
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How does Warp stack against other toolkits when it comes to accessibility and system integration? In my system settings I set colors, default fonts (with fallback and hinting settings), animation preferences (reduce/eliminate animations), disable overlay scrollbars, set buttons to include text where possible, enable dark mode, configure keyboard shortcuts, and sometimes enable a screen reader. Windows users can enable High Contrast Mode to force their preferred palettes. To what degree will this toolkit respect these settings? On Linux: the only options I know of with decent system integration, accessibility, and some presence outside the Freedesktop.org ecosystem are Qt, GTK, and the Web. Flutter falls flat, with outstanding WCAG level A blockers like functional keyboard navigation and basic levels of customization (e.g. disabling animation); relevant issues typically get de-prioritized. This is despite its massive funding and development efforts, so I’m not optimistic about other contenders. AccessKit looks like a start for cross-platform interoperability between accessibility APIs. Until it’s ready, support for each platform’s accessibility APIs and screen readers will need to be implemented and tested. It’s a monumental task. I worry that releasing yet another inaccessible toolkit will merely increase the disability gap.