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Thread: DOM Inspector

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Number of posts in this thread: 3 (In chronological order)

From: Jamous, JP
Date: Thu, Aug 18 2016 8:34AM
Subject: DOM Inspector
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Folks,

I have pages where I am unable to see the markup using Internet Explorer Source View. If I press F12 to use the DOM Inspector, JAWS 17 does not work with it well. AT least, I haven't found a way for it to work with it.

Do you recommend any instructions or browser extension that I can use to view how JavaScript is creating he markup after it executes?

I do not care if it works with IE, firefox or chrome. As long as it works with JAWS 17 and allows me to read the code easily.

Thanks.




**************************************************

Jean-Pierre Jamous
Digital Accessibility Specialist & Developer
UI Accessibility Team

The only limitations in life are those we set for ourselves

**************************************************

From: Birkir R. Gunnarsson
Date: Thu, Aug 18 2016 8:45AM
Subject: Re: DOM Inspector
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I always use Firebug, see my instruction article at:
http://bats.fyi/2016/06/17/using-firebug-jaws-analyze-webpages/
Firefox, as of version 49, will have pretty awesomely accessible
developer tools.
https://www.marcozehe.de/2016/05/24/the-firefox-developer-tools-inspector-panel-is-becoming-accessible/

At their CSUN presentation this year, Microsoft promised to make the
Edge developer tools accessible, I don't have Edge installed so I
don't know what the progress is.
I sat down for a couple of hours with the Google folks to explain the
problems with Chrome dev tools accessibility. I need to follow up and
see if they have managed to turn that very fun session into useful
feedback or action.
That's all I know, Firefox is your mom, if you want to inspect the DOM
(getting poetic).
-B


On 8/18/16, Jamous, JP < = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = > wrote:
> Folks,
>
> I have pages where I am unable to see the markup using Internet Explorer
> Source View. If I press F12 to use the DOM Inspector, JAWS 17 does not work
> with it well. AT least, I haven't found a way for it to work with it.
>
> Do you recommend any instructions or browser extension that I can use to
> view how JavaScript is creating he markup after it executes?
>
> I do not care if it works with IE, firefox or chrome. As long as it works
> with JAWS 17 and allows me to read the code easily.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
>
>
> **************************************************
>
> Jean-Pierre Jamous
> Digital Accessibility Specialist & Developer
> UI Accessibility Team
>
> The only limitations in life are those we set for ourselves
>
> **************************************************
>
>
> > > > >


--
Work hard. Have fun. Make history.

From: Jamous, JP
Date: Thu, Aug 18 2016 9:40AM
Subject: Re: DOM Inspector
← Previous message | No next message

Thank you




**************************************************

Jean-Pierre Jamous
Digital Accessibility Specialist & Developer
UI Accessibility Team

The only limitations in life are those we set for ourselves

**************************************************

-----Original Message-----
From: WebAIM-Forum [mailto: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = ] On Behalf Of Birkir R. Gunnarsson
Sent: Thursday, August 18, 2016 9:46 AM
To: WebAIM Discussion List < = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = >
Subject: Re: [WebAIM] DOM Inspector

I always use Firebug, see my instruction article at:
http://bats.fyi/2016/06/17/using-firebug-jaws-analyze-webpages/
Firefox, as of version 49, will have pretty awesomely accessible developer tools.
https://www.marcozehe.de/2016/05/24/the-firefox-developer-tools-inspector-panel-is-becoming-accessible/

At their CSUN presentation this year, Microsoft promised to make the Edge developer tools accessible, I don't have Edge installed so I don't know what the progress is.
I sat down for a couple of hours with the Google folks to explain the problems with Chrome dev tools accessibility. I need to follow up and see if they have managed to turn that very fun session into useful feedback or action.
That's all I know, Firefox is your mom, if you want to inspect the DOM (getting poetic).
-B


On 8/18/16, Jamous, JP < = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = > wrote:
> Folks,
>
> I have pages where I am unable to see the markup using Internet
> Explorer Source View. If I press F12 to use the DOM Inspector, JAWS 17
> does not work with it well. AT least, I haven't found a way for it to work with it.
>
> Do you recommend any instructions or browser extension that I can use
> to view how JavaScript is creating he markup after it executes?
>
> I do not care if it works with IE, firefox or chrome. As long as it
> works with JAWS 17 and allows me to read the code easily.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
>
>
> **************************************************
>
> Jean-Pierre Jamous
> Digital Accessibility Specialist & Developer UI Accessibility Team
>
> The only limitations in life are those we set for ourselves
>
> **************************************************
>
>
> > > archives at http://webaim.org/discussion/archives
> >


--
Work hard. Have fun. Make history.