5 Matching Annotations
  1. Sep 2025
    1. Neighbourhoods and former municipalities Main articles: History of neighbourhoods in Toronto and List of neighbourhoods in Toronto

      Good: This link is an example of good accessibility practice because it uses descriptive text (‘History of neighbourhoods in Toronto’). Users, including those with screen readers, can understand the destination of the link without guessing.

    2. Throughout the city, there exist hundreds of small neighbourhoods and some larger neighbourhoods covering a few square kilometres.[citation needed]

      Bad: Citation needed. This isn’t strictly a motor/visual disability issue, but it impacts accessibility of content in terms of reliability. Users need to trust what they read; unsourced claims can reduce clarity and credibility.

    3. Toronto Climate chart (explanation) J F M A M J J A S O N D     65     0 −7     54     1 −6     53     5 −2     78     12 4     76     19 10     82     24 15     77     27 18     72     26 18     69     22 14     69     15 8     71     8 2     58     3 −3 █ Average max. and min. temperatures in °C █ Precipitation totals in mmSource: Environment Canada[131] showImperial conversion

      Bad: Low contrast in parts of the climate chart (pale colours and small labels). For people with low vision or colour-vision issues, pale colours + small text make reading hard. The chart needs stronger contrast and legible fonts.

    4. Early history

      Good: headings let people using keyboards or screen readers jump to relevant sections easily without having to scroll through everything. It improves navigation.

    5. Skyline of downtown Toronto and the CN Tower

      Good: These images help users who use screen readers because the alt text or captions give a description of what’s shown. Without that, a lot of visual info is lost for them.