On Fri, Oct 21, 2022, at 17:42, Jonathan S. Katz wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Thanks for the suggestions. Comments inline:
>
> On 10/21/22 9:54 AM, Niels Bom wrote:
>> Hi!
>> 
>> I have 2 small ideas to improve the usability of the PostgreSQL 
>> documentation. I'm looking at v15 (1) mostly.
>> 
>> Idea 1:
>> Give the text width of the main content a max width.
>
> Why? Can you please provide examples? Screenshots are OK.

Setting a max-width on regular textual content is good for readability, which 
in turn increases accessibility. See this W3C a11y documentation (1) and an 
a11y page by the US government (2) for more detailed info.

Using the CSS max-width property makes narrower sizes possible (for smaller 
screens) but sets an upper limit. The newer `ch` unit in CSS is a good-enough 
approximation of the average width of a character. I've seen 66ch as the 
"ideal" width for regular text. For the docs code examples need to have enough 
width too of course. But we can have those be wider than their containing 
element if need be.

1: https://www.w3.org/WAI/tutorials/page-structure/styling/
2: https://accessibility.digital.gov/visual-design/typography/

>
>> Idea 2:
>> Each h3 and h4 element should be a link pointing to the nearest parent 
>> section with an id. This makes deeplinking to specific parts of a page 
>> easier. This prevents people from having to scroll to the top, find out 
>> which table-of-content-link they have to click to get the deeplink of where 
>> they wanted to link. This is actually quite a common pattern. See the Python 
>> docs (2) and the Mozilla docs (3) as examples. The pattern on those sites is 
>> even a little nicer by showing an icon on hover.
>
> This has been on my backlog for awhile, i.e. to have the hovering 
> "anchor holders". I'll try to move it up on the list.
Cool! I could help if you want to.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jonathan
>
>
> Attachments:
> * OpenPGP_signature


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