I'm writing a blog post about the kbd
element, and as part of that I'm trying to see if it actually helps in terms of accessibility, e.g. do any screen readers reckognise the kbd
element or do anything with it?
I've tried googling around for an answer but turned up nothing (possibly attributed to how few people actually use this element?)
There does not seem to be any evidence of any particular handling of the kbd
element in browsers, assistive software, or otherwise, except for the default rendering (which uses the browser’s default monospace).
It is difficult to image what any software could do with it, since it simply indicates that some text is presented as user input – it just represents it, without actually involving any user interaction. And the content can be just about anything. User input is often a command or a filename or other “computerish” expression, but it could equally well be in a natural language or a meaningless string (say, a password).