How is accessibility part of polishing a React UI?
Accessible interactions, modals that trap focus, dropdowns that handle keyboard, and interactive elements with accessible names, are part of polish, not separate. A UI that is not accessible is not polished, no matter how it looks.
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More FAQs in Final Polishing Techniques for a Production-Ready React UI
Consistent spacing and typography, hover and focus states on every interactive element, smooth short transitions, skeletons for loading, helpful empty and error states, accessible interactions, and performance work. These are what separate a finished UI from a prototype.
They give feedback that an element is interactive. Hover is for mouse users; focus is for keyboard users. Both are essential for polish and accessibility, since they show the user what they are about to interact with.
Short, around 150 to 250ms. Keep them for feedback, not decoration. Long transitions slow the UI and frustrate users, while no transitions feel instant and abrupt.
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