I want to use iconography in a web UI, while retaining the context language of what clicking on the link will achieve, but possibly not displaying the text and crowding UI space. For example using CRUD screens, I want to display a plus icon for adding an item, a minus icon for deleting, it, a pencil icon for editing it, and a magnifying glass to search for a different item. There are a couple of ways to achieve this.
Render an
img
element inside of thea
nchor. Theimg alt
attribute will describe what the icon represents (alt="pencil icon"), and the title attribute will describe the intended consequence (i.e. "Click here to edit this widget").Render an
a
nchor tag only, and use css to display the image as a background. In this case, the anchor's content should describe the intended consequence, however it needs to be wrapped in a span element so that its display style can be set to none. The anchor should also contain a title attribute matching the content (without a surrounding span of course).
It seems to me like option #2 is easier to implement in an asp.net mvc app. Since the icon is a design concern and not a markup concern, it makes sense to define the image in CSS. It also makes things easier from a code maintenance perspective... changing the img src location would only necessitate changes in the CSS file and no view files. Removing the CSS would cause the application to fall back to full text accessibility too.
What smells funny to me is the part about nesting the link content into a span so that it can have disply: none;
set in the css. Another thing is, if I use the :hover selector to swap the image and provide a rollover / rollout effect, the images seem to take longer to swap out than when done with javascript.
Am I missing anything here?