Sara Soueidan digs into this HTML/UX situation. “Yes” or “no” is a boolean situation. A checkbox represents this: it’s either on or off (uh, mostly). But is a checkbox always the best UX? It depends, of course:
Use radio buttons if you expect the answer to be equally distributed. If I expect the answer to be heavily biased to one answer I prefer the checkbox. That way the user either makes an explicit statement or just acknowledges the expected
… Read article ““Yes or No?””
The post “Yes or No?” appeared first on CSS-Tricks. You can support CSS-Tricks by being an MVP Supporter.
Jelentkezéshez jelentkezzen be
EGYÉB POSTS Ebben a csoportban


The reading-flow and reading-order proposed CSS properties are designed to specify the source order of HTML elements in the DOM tree, or in simpler terms, how accessibility tools deduce the order o


Clever, clever that Andy Bell. He shares a technique for displaying image alt
text when the image fails to load. Well, more precisely, it's a technique to apply styles to the alt

Shape master Temani Afif has what might be the largest collection of CSS shapes on the planet with all the tools to generate them on the fly.


Some weekend reading on the heels of Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAADM), which took place yesterday. The Email Markup Con