ANDI is a web accessibility inspection tool.
- Automatically detects accessibility issues
- Suggests ways to improve accessibility
- Reveals what a screen reader should say for interactive elements
For many web developers, accessibility is an unfamiliar and complex territory and therefore often neglected. ANDI bridges the gap between developers and end users by revealing where accessibility issues occur on the page. To accomplish this, it analyzes the HTML of the web page being testing and extracts accessibility related markup.
- It's easy to install, quick to run, and helps satisfy accessibility requirements.
- It saves them time by automatically finding potential defects and offering solutions.
- When web pages are accessible, everyone can efficiently perceive, understand, navigate, and interact with the Web.
ANDI is a browser based "favelet" that, essentially, installs with a drag and drop, and is launched with the click of a button. Users can visit this installation page for browser installation instructions (includes keyboard accessible instructions).
If an organization wishes to host its own fork or copy of ANDI, see this page for alternate hosting instructions.
If you would like to contribute to ANDI's development, some background knowledge of accessibility would certainly be helpful. ANDI is written in javascript, jquery, html, and CSS. Knowledge of javascript optimization and DOM manipulation is crucial to maintaining ANDI's quick agility.
ANDI offers the ability to inspect focusable elements, images, data tables, page structure, color contrast, in-depth link and button analysis, and hidden content detection.
ANDI is maintained by the Accessible Solutions Branch at SSA.