![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[site community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/comm_staff.png)
Allow/encourage title attributes to links list entries
Title:
Allow/encourage title attributes to links list entries
Area:
styles
Summary:
Create text area within the Links list for link TITLE text, that would then display as per browser standards.
Description:
Currently, the only option we have for a Links List entry is URL and link text. It's good practise to give links Title text as well, that normally, depending on browser settings, then displays as a tool tip.
Other platforms, such as Wordpress, allow and encourage links to be given Title attributes, following usability guides and allowing users to give expanded explanations of what a link is, and why it's there in the sidebar.
Example: in my links list, I link to Miss_s_b using her name. For sidebar space reasons, that's all I can give. I'd like to allow users to know if they hober over a link that she's my fiancée and give a brief description of her content. That's good practise, recommended by usability experts. It can also aid search engines and is recommended white hat SEO behaviour.
This suggestion:
Should be implemented as-is.
17 (50.0%)
Should be implemented with changes. (please comment)
0 (0.0%)
Shouldn't be implemented.
7 (20.6%)
(I have no opinion)
10 (29.4%)
(Other: please comment)
0 (0.0%)
no subject
I'm apparently using it totally wrong so far on my website, because I'm mainly using it so that people who display thumbnail images in galleries could see the alt-text with the description of the full picture in hover. Like in my drawble gallery, which is rows of preview thumbnails of sketches I did for other people from prompts, the alt texts give the prompts and the name of the recipient, things like "iguana in a spacesuit for hsavinien" and the same shows in the title field to help visitors who do see the thumbnail, which is often only from part of the sketch, to decide which image to see in full.
no subject
When I test it in a local html file with a link with no image, in Internet Explorer, it doesn't pop up for an instant or two after I hover (probably to let me click if I want).
I almost never move a mouse over a link unless I'm about to click on it, so absent this suggestion I might never have even discovered the possibility (and anyway, my mouse is sometimes not quite where the pointer claims it is, and my hand isn't always steady, so there's no guarantee I could hover successfully if I were trying).
I'm not opposed to this change, but I'm not sure how useful it is either.