this post was submitted on 08 Jun 2024
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a11y (digital accessibility)
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While I don't print much in this day and age, most sites that are doing accessibility correctly should have a print.css that overrides dark mode and other non-printable styling, so that things print correctly. This is fairly basic and has been a part of the W3C's advice on web design since at least 2006. People really should read the W3C's documents, they're a tad boring, but very informative on making an inclusive internet for all.
Yes!
But while we're talking about it, know of any real reason dark mode isn't the default now that printing isn't a serious consideration?
As far as I can tell, folks just haven't switched back after 'print.css' was invented. (The entire Internet used to be black text on light gray backgrounds, then people started printing the Internet out on paper and every background became glaring white, presumably to save ink.)