This content originally appeared on Adactio: Journal and was authored by Adactio: Journal
In two of my recent talks—In And Out Of Style and Design Principles For The Web—I finish by looking at three different components:
- a button,
- a dropdown, and
- a datepicker.
In each case you could use native HTML elements:
button
,select
, andinput type="date"
.
Or you could use div
s with a whole bunch of JavaScript and ARIA.
In the case of a datepicker, I totally understand why you’d go for writing your own JavaScript and ARIA. The native HTML element is quite restricted, especially when it comes to styling.
In the case of a dropdown, it’s less clear-cut. Personally, I’d use a select
element. While it’s currently impossible to style the open state of a select
element, you can style the closed state with relative ease. That’s good enough for me.
Still, I can understand why that wouldn’t be good enough for some cases. If pixel-perfect consistency across platforms is a priority, then you’re going to have to break out the JavaScript and ARIA.
Personally, I think chasing pixel-perfect consistency across platforms isn’t even desirable, but I get it. I too would like to have more control over styling select
elements. That’s one of the reasons why the work being done by the Open UI group is so important.
But there’s one more component: a button.
Again, you could use the native button
element, or you could use a div
or a span
and add your own JavaScript and ARIA.
Now, in this case, I must admit that I just don’t get it. Why wouldn’t you just use the native button
element? It has no styling issues and the browser gives you all the interactivity and accessibility out of the box.
I’ve been trying to understand the mindset of a developer who wouldn’t use a native button
element. The easy answer would be that they’re just bad people, and dismiss them. But that would probably be lazy and inaccurate. Nobody sets out to make a website with poor performance or poor accessibility. And yet, by choosing not to use the native HTML element, that’s what’s likely to happen.
I think I might have finally figured out what might be going on in the mind of such a developer. I think the issue is one of control.
When I hear that there’s a native HTML element—like button
or select
—that comes with built-in behaviours around interaction and accessibility, I think “Great! That’s less work for me. I can just let the browser deal with it.” In other words, I relinquish control to the browser (though not entirely—I still want the styling to be under my control as much as possible).
But I now understand that someone else might hear that there’s a native HTML element—like button
or select
—that comes with built-in behaviours around interaction and accessibility, and think “Uh-oh! What if there unexpected side-effects of these built-in behaviours that might bite me on the ass?” In other words, they don’t trust the browsers enough to relinquish control.
I get it. I don’t agree. But I get it.
If your background is in computer science, then the ability to precisely predict how a programme will behave is a virtue. Any potential side-effects that aren’t within your control are undesirable. The only way to ensure that an interface will behave exactly as you want is to write it entirely from scratch, even if that means using more JavaScript and ARIA than is necessary.
But I don’t think it’s a great mindset for the web. The web is filled with uncertainties—browsers, devices, networks. You can’t possibly account for all of the possible variations. On the web, you have to relinquish some control.
Still, I’m glad that I now have a bit more insight into why someone would choose to attempt to retain control by using div
, JavaScript and ARIA. It’s not what I would do, but I think I understand the motivation a bit better now.
This content originally appeared on Adactio: Journal and was authored by Adactio: Journal
Adactio: Journal | Sciencx (2022-07-25T15:36:20+00:00) Control. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2022/07/25/control/
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