Ensuring your frontend code is accessible requires consistent development effort and testing of inclusive markup and scripted interactions. In this workshop we’ll test an accessible web application using widely supported and proven tools and techniques. We’ll cover everything about building accessible frontend applications, from the absolute basics with HTML and CSS to the tricky parts you’ll run into building and testing JavaScript-heavy components.
- This workshop is intended for intermediate to advanced web developers and testers.
- Experience with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript will be necessary. Experience with React will be helpful.
- Browser-based setup with GitPod
- GitPod provides a cloud-based development environment similar to VS Code
- Requires a login with Github
- Note: GitPod may have accessibility issues
- Download a zip file for local setup
- Clone this Git repo for local setup (see instructions below)
All of these must be available in your PATH
. To verify things are set up
properly, you can run this:
git --version
node --version
yarn --version
If you have trouble with any of these, learn more about the PATH environment variable and how to fix it here for windows or mac/linux.
If you want to commit and push your work as you go, you’ll want to fork first and then clone your fork rather than this repo directly. Be sure to fetch the latest code on the day of the workshop by syncing your fork.
After you’ve made sure to have the pre-requisites installed, you should be able to run a few commands to get set up:
git clone https://github.com/testing-accessibility/workshop-automated-a11y-testing.git
cd workshop-automated-a11y-testing
yarn
There may be periodic changes to this repo. To update your local build, run:
git pull
Note: if you have local changes, you'll need to commit them to a branch. Here's some extra help on using Git: [https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/git-pull-explained/]
If you get any errors when building the site, please read through them and see if you can find out what the problem is. If you can’t work it out on your own then please file an issue and provide all the output from the commands you ran (even if it’s a lot).
This repo contains various workshop files and a React web application. To get the app up and running (and really see if it worked) with Parcel, run this command from the project’s root folder:
yarn start
This should start the site for your browser at the address indicated in your Terminal:
http://localhost:1234
You can also view a deployed version: https://workshop-automated-a11y-testing.testingaccessibility.com/
In this workshop, we get more advanced with a React web application built out of the same monorepo. There are folders for each of the sections and the build will already be set up with the required tooling.
The URL is: http://localhost:1234/
Windows note: Jest and Puppeteer are not working on WSL for Workshop 2. This may be fixed at some point in the future, but consider it a heads up.
- exercise0-storybook
- To start Storybook, run this command:
yarn storybook
- To start Storybook, run this command:
- exercise1-jest
- Run unit tests:
yarn test
- Run unit tests:
- exercise2-cypress-components
- Run Cypress Component Tests:
yarn test:components
- Run Cypress Component Tests:
- exercise3-cypress-integration
- Run Cypress integration tests:
yarn test:e2e
- Run Cypress integration tests:
- exercise4-puppeteer
- Run Puppeteer with Jest:
yarn test:puppeteer
- Run Puppeteer with Jest:
- exercise5-ci
This structure will allow you to iterate on working files with separate directories for the example sections.
The purpose of an exercise is not for you to work through all the material. It’s intended to get your brain thinking about the right questions to ask as we go through the material together.
Contributions of any kind are welcome!
Links from this and all of the Testing Accessibility workshops have been compiled on a resources page: https://workshop-resources.testingaccessibility.com/#workshops-testing