Easily spot missing ARIA labels, misused ARIA roles, and incomplete keyboard support in your web applications.
Total ratings
4.91
(Rating count:
32)
Review summary
Pros
- Invaluable for debugging accessibility tagging and improving website accessibility.
- Simple and easy to use, especially for checking how screen readers interact with web pages.
- Helps developers create semantically correct HTML and provides feedback on code structure.
- Highly recommended by users for improving UX and accessibility practices.
Cons
- Does not work well with Shadow DOM, leading to issues for some applications.
Most mentioned
- Great for checking and fixing accessibility issues.
- Helps visualize and understand the semantic structure of websites.
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User reviews
Recent rating average:
4.90
All time rating average:
4.91
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Date | Author | Rating | Lang | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024-11-03 | Joaquin Esteban | en | Great value and execution. Helps me debug accessibility tagging without compromising usability. Well done! | |
2024-10-18 | Florian Koch | en | Perfect tool. Thank you. | |
2024-10-09 | Francisco Vieira | |||
2024-10-08 | Jakub Jatczak | |||
2024-10-08 | Mark Wylde | en | Fantastic idea and execution! | |
2024-06-25 | Jayden Richardson | |||
2024-05-17 | Paul G | en | I love this tool. I hope it continues to improve and become more helpful to website accessibility testers. | |
2024-02-28 | Daniil Glezer | |||
2023-11-14 | Thomas A. Reinert | |||
2023-09-18 | Ahmed Elswerkey | cool, also you can see the accessibility tree from the inspecting tool, Elements > "styles row" > accessibility |
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