Hi Isomorphic,
Ok, understood it.
Thanks for the answer,
Blama
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
-
It's intentional that we do not disable it by default. We don't want to default to suppressing the default focus indicator, which is platform-specific, and is what is familiar to users already - doing so is arguably an accessibility issue.
However you can use standard CSS to disable the native focus indicator, either system-wide or just for specific scenarios where it's redundant, like you describe.
Leave a comment:
-
Browser (Chrome) CSS outline not disabled on purpose?
Hi Isomorphic,
I noticed the annoying CSS Outlines, Chrome puts around the focused element by default.
If you look at this online showcase example in FF 26 in Simplicity-skin and click in the "From: N months ago"-input, you will notice that you already "outlined" the selected element via this CSS code:
Simplicity skin_styles.css excerpt:
When you look at it in Chrome 35, you additionally see Chrome's thick outline (from the default browser style sheet?).Code:.textItemFocused, .selectItemTextFocused { color:black; -moz-outline-offset:-1; border-top:1px solid #5678ac; border-left:1px solid #bccde6; border-right:1px solid #afc6e2; border-bottom:1px solid #c0d7ec; }
Shouldn't this outline be disabled in all skins with respect to your CSS already in place and your pixel-perfect layout approach?
Or is there a reason for having the outline enabled? If I "tab-through" the showcase example, I can see a very very thin dotted outline in Firefox as well, but this is less disruptive and not interfering with your skin as this is the case for Chrome.
Best regards,
BlamaTags: None
Leave a comment: