- Image replacement techniques
- Farhner Image Replacement (FIR): not accessible!
This method hides the text from some screen readers like JAWS. Home Page Reader ignores screen styles and has no problem with it.
- Leahy/Landridge Image Replacement (LIR): mostly accessible.
This method fails when images are turned off or unavailable. Combining this method with the
title
title attribute is sometimes enough... - Pixy’s No-Preload Rollovers: Accessible, but doesn’t allow for scalable text sizes.
- Farhner Image Replacement (FIR): not accessible!
- Lists
- Russ Weakley’s Listamatic, Listutorial, and Listamatic 2.
- Ian Lloyd’s List-o-matic (inspired by Listamatic)
- Layout
- CSS-Discuss Wiki Layouts
- Kevin Tatroe’s Layout-o-matic (inspired by List-o-matic)
A free online tool that automatically generates cross-browser CSS layouts, including two- and three-column layouts with header and footer. Note: The tool violates several accessibility principles (auto-submisions on forms, for example) but it’s a useful tool, nonetheless. Referral (and first sentence) from Zeldman.
- Firda Beka’s Firdamatic
Another referral from Zeldman.
- Eric Costello’s Glish
- Owen Briggs’ CSS tutorials and Box Lesson
- Experimental (Potentially useful, but not necessarily accessible.)
- Eric Meyer’s CSS/Edge
- Lasse Reichstein Nielsen’s Border Slant Demo