Thanks for your feedback. I will definitely consider your suggestion.
If you have ideas of plugins, that could increase WordPress accessibility please let me know. I’ll be very glad to help with the development.
MAC
]]>One small tweak I think would improve the plugin is to remove the (…) from the end of the link where the whole title does not exceed the allowed number of words.
Thanks once again.
Graham
]]>Not only does it make some of the my client’s site’s look better it also improved the SEO by giving meaningful links instead of “read more”
I hope you can help me with a quick question:
I’ve been scouring the net for a wordpress plugin to allow font changes like the one you are using on this page.
All the options I’ve tried so far don’t work very well:
http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/font-resizer/
AccessKeys -> does nothing useful a the moment,
Do you have any advice on a WordPress Plugin to allow font size changing for visually impaired users?
Regards
Louis Slabbert
]]>Thanks for the explanation. I’ll just keep my eyes open, or maybe write it myself
I’ll let you know.
Thanks for using myReadMore plugin, and thank for the comment.
The usage of myReadMore was intended to be as straightforward as possible with the minimum amount of work needed to get it running. So the option to customize the ‘read more’ text per post, and not globally, was not considered in the original idea.
The purpose was to create different links to different content, by including the post title in the link, other then just using the standard “read more” link.
This by WP default results in a set of different hyperlinks all accessible by the same anchor text (read more), wich is a major accessibility mistake.
However your suggestion is something that definitely cold be added in a future version. Keep your eye open for upgrades!
Thanks again!
MAC