From March 6th, 2013 to March 19th, 2019, 36% user give 5-star rating, 21% user give 4-star rating, 24% user give 3-star rating, 9% user give 2-star rating, 9% user give 1-star rating. for Accessibility Developer Tools chrome extension.
good
very good
This is an awesome tool. It's a pity it won't be here for long. I would have paid for this extension.
This is really good. I still would love to see this instead of lighthouse tool on chrome.
Can this extension be used with a SPA? Because each time I click analyze it loads my page, which is not what I want. I want to see accessibility issues on current elements on the page, don't reload the url because is nothing on the first page, only a menu.
it's great
Works ok, But it should show the current standard evaluated
When test is performed target device always turn into mobile view (Nexus 5X) even if it is removed from emulation list. How can it be changed?
Did this extension stop working with lighthouse on Chrome 61+? The audit tab has been kidnapped by lighthouse, which is ok, but only tests for mobile....
It would be great to know exactly which standard it is hoping to test for, WCAG20? When test is performed target device always turn into Nexus 5X. How can it be changed?
I'm trying to view all may facebook games, old and new, but for some reason I can't!
Very helpful tool but unfortunately not compatible with Chrome 60. Chrome 60's built-in Lighthouse tool cannot audit the current page state (and is also much much slower).
Downloaded it, then it opened automatically to the url on my active tab. Used all of my 5 free URLS so I couldn't actually see if it worked. Totally sucker move on my part, maybe, or maybe they're just not interested in having you try it as it is really a FOR SALE app.
The feature to export the logs - i could not find it could you implement summary report to export or save as
This extension gives a reasonable idea of the issues on a page, but it would be great to know exactly which standard it is hoping to test for, WCAG20? Please clarify and, better yet, refer to the standard's documentation rather than your own documentation. In addition: - Warning about a tel: href in an anchor (AX_TEXT_04). It is perfectly obvious that this is a telephone number link and should not generate this warning. - Controls should have labels (AX_TEXT_01) does not take into account the Placeholder attribute, voiding the need for a label - The tests did not pick up on a checkbox that did not have any text asssociated with it - Some explanations in the documents are stubs only. But again, it's a good starting point.
gud
I tested a single privacy policy page offered by one of our applications and found 2 items I believe any auditor, manual or automated should catch: 1. This page was missing an <h1>, instead beginning with a single <h2>. Why does this auditor not test for basic page structure? Accessibility requires a single, and present, <h1> to assist in landmark navigation of content. 2. I saw a test for generic link text (i.e. "Click Here". Although the test does catch English translated generic strings, it does not for Spanish, which tells me there is no support outside en-us. Is this intended?
Just what you want to test accessibility and performance
A bit annoying. Spits errors through the console.
Something that was really missing for Chrome. Great!
Every web developer should have this. In fact, it should be part of the core tools.
Why isn't this part of the main dev tools? Some of the Severe issues could really just appear in the main dev console all the timeā¦
It works, but I have no idea what conditions it is set to, i.e.: what the basis of the regulations being checked is. Which sucks cause so far this is one of the very few tools that works with AJAX.
Great tool to test page performance. Makes a great addition along with the other chrome dev tools to diagnostic. Highly recommend it if testing and debugging performance issues with pages.
works great!
I AM SOOOOOOOO GLAD THAT SOMEONE... Especially a company w/ the standing & corporate respect of Google has FINALLY made it easier for the average web developer to figure out if their website and/or web-based application is accessible to individuals with various types of disabilities!! Truth be told, I haven't actually started to even USE the app yet, but as someone who is both a Web Developer for a non-profit that serves the Disability community AS WELL as someone who is disabled myself, this was PRAISE that just couldn't wait!!
Great tool for auditing your web applications for accessibility.
Version 2.7 is currently mostly useless without an "Options" button on the Extensions page or icon with options in the extensions toolbar. After reading a little more of the details, I can see that it makes the option for Accessibility audits, but since the course for Web Accessibility shows options, it's really confusing that they are unavailable. Edit: Updated with a new version. Options are back. Now if ChromeVox was working correctly in Chrome 31.0.1626.5 dev-m Aura SyzyASan...
Installed it. Accessibility does not show up in the Audits Tab. Doesn't work at all...frustrating (30 min. wasted trying to get it to appear, let alone work), 2 hours later... uninstalled it, and installed it again...Success! it works.
limited tools, but some way helpful. as they can pinpoint where is error or pass
Works well, but it would be useful if the contrast ratio warning displayed info about the calculated contrast value. I don't understand why my white text on 10% transparent black is not reasonable. I would also like some tests validating my use of HTML5 elements and ARIA roles.
doesn't seem to work on my browser.
This makes it really easy to evaluate your website and make sure that it works well for blind users!