|
You are here |
wordpress-staging.zeroheight.com | ||
| | | | |
www.smashingmagazine.com
|
|
| | | | | At its heart, "Inclusive Components" is a detailed, practical handbook for building fully accessible interfaces. The book examines common interface patterns - accordions, tables, tabs, toggles and everything in-between - through the lens of inclusion. The result is a dozen of fully accessible and robust patterns we author, plug in, and use daily. Jump to table of contents. The book features 12 common UI components, broken down in detail, one by one. The in-depth explorations are meticulously illustrated and code examples culminate as bulletproof code snippets, applicable to your work right away. Plus a strategy for building accessible interfaces for your own components - all in one book. Download a free PDF excerpt (1.1 MB). You'll learn how to build: access... | |
| | | | |
blog.stackblitz.com
|
|
| | | | | Components are an important part of implementing design on the web. In this article, we cover best practices for documenting components that are part of a design system or component library. | |
| | | | |
zeroheight.com
|
|
| | | | | Rosie from our engineering team takes us through how zeroheight got their color design tokens in sync using Figma variables, and how we made sure everyone was using them in the code. | |
| | | | |
zeplin.io
|
|
| | | With Zeplin, Figma designers stay focused on design. The rest of the team gets an organized place for design files, clarity on user flows, and design systems connected to code. | ||