Jason Knight
1 min readAug 1, 2022

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Oh, and yes. If we're only supposed to use one H1 becuase that's the root element non-visual UA's rely upon to identify the site, and if H2 inherently means the start of a subsection of the H1... and you have sections started with headings that are not subsections of where you have the H1...

Then you have the depth one on the wrong heading. Irregardless of how many alleged experts shit on usability and accessibility by slopping the H1 on things where it makes ZERO flipping sense whatsofreaking ever.

Well unless you're shoving your head up 1997's rectum and choosing H1..H6 based on font size not meaning. It means the heading that all subsections -- aka content areas started by H2/lower -- are subsections OF.

If you're not doing that, you're flipping the bird at accessibility, semantic markup, and logical document structure you should have flipping learned in grade school.

Or as I've joked for a few years, what was grade school in the late '70's and early '80's, so that's what? Fifth year of college for an English major now?

NOT that I should talk about grammar with my archaic verbiage and style. Goes hand in hand with learning Olde Englisc alongside modern.

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Jason Knight
Jason Knight

Written by Jason Knight

Accessibility and Efficiency Consultant, Web Developer, Musician, and just general pain in the arse

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