There are a lot of blind people on here, who use screen reader software to tell them what is on the screen. To help screen reader users, it's a good idea to use emoji rather than old-style smileys.

For example ๐Ÿ˜„ will be read out loud as "smile" because that's its alt text. However, :D will be read out loud as "colon D".

(Some old-style smileys do work with screen readers, but most don't. Emoji are safer.)

If you're interested in accessibiity, I strongly recommend following nostr:npub17dffhp0xpxw7we4eu9vxpwqwwg5d2dch72emgjuraw2ng43aeqlsk9m5wm

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

nostr:npub10940z6cfs9wndhte7mkgw7tw79k68pp5z0k84weuph5swvsrn2xqrm2wum nostr:npub17dffhp0xpxw7we4eu9vxpwqwwg5d2dch72emgjuraw2ng43aeqlsk9m5wm I'm happy to use emoji vs. old school ASCII smileys!

But just FYI, my version of VoiceOver reads the emoji in your post as "grinning face with smiling eyes" -- which is it's official name, I think?

nostr:npub10940z6cfs9wndhte7mkgw7tw79k68pp5z0k84weuph5swvsrn2xqrm2wum nostr:npub17dffhp0xpxw7we4eu9vxpwqwwg5d2dch72emgjuraw2ng43aeqlsk9m5wm Wow. I never would have thought that a picture would work better in screen readers than text! ๐Ÿ˜ฎ

#accessibility