I have a question about Developer Mode on iPhone.
Currently, the home button on my iPhone SE (2nd generation) is broken, so I use AssistiveTouch to display a virtual home button. However, in Developer Mode, the virtual home button does not appear, making it impossible to enable Developer Mode.
Is there any way to enable Developer Mode in this situation?
General
RSS for tagExplore best practices for creating inclusive apps that cater to users with diverse abilities
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有在Info.plist配置权限使用说明(NSLocalNetworkUsageDescription),App本地网络权限也已经打开,但App请求局域网设备接口时,仍返回异常:
Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1009 "The Internet connection appears to be offline." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=50, NSUnderlyingError=0x302d79d40 {Error Domain=kCFErrorDomainCFNetwork Code=-1009 "(null)" UserInfo={_NSURLErrorNWPathKey=unsatisfied (Local network prohibited), interface: en0[802.11], ipv4, uses wifi, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=50, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1}}, _NSURLErrorFailingURLSessionTaskErrorKey=LocalDataTask .<1>, _NSURLErrorRelatedURLSessionTaskErrorKey=(
"LocalDataTask .<1>"
), NSLocalizedDescription=The Internet connection appears to be offline., NSErrorFailingURLStringKey=http://192.168.1.1:80/xxx, NSErrorFailingURLKey=http://192.168.1.1:80/xxx, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1}
Topic:
Accessibility & Inclusion
SubTopic:
General
I’m seeing a layout issue in SwiftUI on iOS 26 that only reproduces with specific Accessibility Motion settings.
Steps to reproduce
1. Open Settings → Accessibility → Motion.
2. Enable Reduce Motion and Prefer Cross-Fade Transitions.
3. Launch an app with a SwiftUI TextField.
4. Tap the field to show the keyboard.
5. Dismiss the keyboard (tap outside, swipe down, etc.).
Expected:
After the keyboard is dismissed, the view’s bottom safe area / layout should return to normal.
Actual:
The view continues to reserve space equal to the keyboard height — as if the keyboard were still visible. UI anchored to the safe area remains shifted upward until the view is reloaded.
We have a password entry field with a "show password" button. The button effectively turns the "secure text entry" textfield into a non-secure text entry field allowing the user to view what they typed in.
When VoiceOver is enabled, I am not including that button in the UI; it doesn't seem to make sense to me for the following reasons.
If you properly test with the screen curtain, the functionality is useless. You don't see anything. I've tried to explain this to my accessibility team. It's also quite ridiculous to offer to show a blind user their password, I'm sure they'd love to see it, but they just can't. This would almost seem insulting as well.
If by toggling that button, and turning a secure text entry into a non-secure text entry, now the app is literally speaking their password aloud. This seems like a security vulnerability to me. What if someone else overhears the password spoken aloud.
The accessibility team is insisting that I need to include the "show password" button when VoiceOver is enabled. This is the response I received.
"functionality should be the same for VI users as for sighted users. It may happen that a VI user wants to check what is typed into password field in order to correct mistakes".
Again, I don't agree with that because functionality should not be the same. Functionality should be changed and altered as necessary to make the user experience as accessible as possible.
And in this scenario, to me the functionality doesn't make sense at all in a VoiceOver setting.
Any thoughts on this? Am I incorrect here? Are there benefits of including a "show password" button to a user utilizing VoiceOver? What should then the functionality be? Speak the password aloud?
Thanks.
Hi Apple Developer Community,
I'm experiencing persistent issues with the Apple Search Ads API since today morning (August 16, 2025). My application keeps getting "Service Unavailable" errors when trying to connect to the API endpoints.
Error Details:
Error Message: "Service Unavailable"
HTTP Status: 503/500
API Endpoint: https://api.searchads.apple.com/api/v5/*
Frequency: Consistent failures since August 16, 2025
What I've Tried:
Verified API credentials and certificates are valid
Tested multiple API endpoints
Checked network connectivity
The API was working fine until yesterday, and no changes were made to our implementation. Any insights or updates from the community would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance for your help!
My team has a robust digital accessibility program and processes for WCAG conformance in our apps. Because of this, there are definitely accessibility defects that get caught and addressed in order of impact and business priority like any other bug. Obviously we want to aim for 100% accessibility for our users, but it's a continual work in progress as new enhancements or changes are released.
I'm stuck on the appropriate measurement to indicate support. If we have 50 common tasks and the most central 10 tasks are solid but some supporting (but also common) tasks have a contrast fail or accessibleLabel missing, does that make the whole app not supporting the feature? If "completing the task" is the rubric there are a whole range of interpretations for that.
In a complex app, I anticipate that a group like ours will have strong support for many of the Accessibility Nutrition Labels accessibility features across tasks and devices, but realistically never be 100% free of defects for a given Apple Accessibility feature, even among core tasks.
As I consider the next steps for Nutrition Labels, I do not see anything in the documentation that gives a sort of baseline or measurement for inclusion. We plan to test all steps to complete a task, and log defects accordingly with an assigned timeline for fixing them (as would be true for functional defects).
A common UI idiom in Apple's first party iOS apps is a circle icon with three dots in the upper right of the screen. This serves as a pop-up menu of more options. Some examples include:
Apple Music, Library tab
Photos, Album view
Reminders
In all these cases, VoiceOver reads this element as "More, Button".
In my SwiftUI app, I've implemented a visually identical button.
Menu {
// Button for Menu Item 1
// Button for Menu Item 2
// ...
} label: {
Image(systemName: "ellipsis.circle")
.accessibilityHidden(true)
}
.accessibilityLabel("More")
However, the VoiceOver output in my app is much more verbose. It speaks "More, Button, Pop Up Button, Double Tap To Activate The Picker". Any guidance on how to make this more concise in line with the apps mentioned above?
Haptic or Sound queue to allow for the accessibility of the blind (sound) and deaf population (haptic) for even knowing when location services and the camera were last used?
Also, the grey notification rather than the purple notification for location services should appear for the full 24 hours after an application has used the app, if the correct description is within the "copy" of Settings
The green light lets them know that the application has changed to the camera and fade out orange light both could even have subtle simply click sounds, like a
shutter, big haptic, softer sound, but editable in Settings, of course
I've just received an email from Apple regarding the Global Accessibility Awareness Day and some forthcoming sessions to promote their accessibility features.
What a joke.
For many years, Apple refuses to provide the most basic accessibility requirement on macOS:
LET USERS DISABLE ALL NON-CONSENSUAL UNSOLICITED ANIMATIONS AND OTHER UI CONVULSIONS.
The scourge of animations started from macOS Lion.
Yes, many of them can be, fortunately, disabled through some obscure Terminal commands (that is, if the user is lucky enough to discover them on some obscure internet resources).
The "Reduce motion" control in System Settings is a fake option that doesn't do anything.
And there are two most glaring accessibility violations that cannot be disabled:
Scroll bar rollover highlight effect introduced on macOS 10.7.3. Every time you move the cursor over a scroll bar, the bar gets highlighted. It results in bringing the user's attention to random scroll bars for no reason whatsoever just because the cursor happens to pass over the bar at some point. HUNDREDS of unnecessary, annoying events of distraction daily!
Expand/collapse animation of NSOutlineView (such as when we open/close a folder in the list view in the Finder, as well as any other app that's using outline views). It's extremely annoying, distracting, and time-wasting.
All feedback submitted about this through the years remains mostly ignored (except for a few cases where I received some ridiculous replies from employees who, apparently, are barely familiar with Macs in general).
Apple does NOT care about accessibility. Not only this, but it's obvious that Apple is, in fact, intentionally abusing those users who can't tolerate distracting, time-wasting animations and UI convulsions.
Hello!
I was doing some accessibility testing for my app and found out that when the user switches the text size, all of the data in the text fields is reset, which causes major disruption.
I've tried looking for documentation, but all I've found is information on how to dynamically scale the UI for different text sizes, which I've already implemented.
My guess is that every time Dynamic Type registers a change, it redraws my UI instead of just updating it.
How can I make sure the data is not reset when the text size changes?
Updated to iOS 26 beta and now the TV remote app in the control center won’t open. I’ve tried the following:
Restart phone
Remove shortcut and re-add
Cant find any other troubleshooting methods for this issue online so I’m guessing it’s a new problem.
Topic:
Accessibility & Inclusion
SubTopic:
General
写了个自己用的app,在自己手机上测试中,隔一周左右就打不开了,显示不再可用。
ps.没花钱买开发者账号,app也不打算发布。
Topic:
Accessibility & Inclusion
SubTopic:
General
Hello,
Whenever I put accessibility focus on an image and if image has some text in it, voiceover reads that text along with image's accessibility label.
Is there a way to programmatically turn off text recognition on images for accessibility?
I couldn't find any relevant accessibility API's that could help here.
Thanks!
I'm facing a bizarre issue with the Apple's Accessibility APIs. I am registering an AXObserver that listens for, among other things, the kAXSelectedTextChangedNotification. For many new users, the kAXSelectTextChangedNotification is not triggered, even though they have enabled Accessibility permission for the app. Other notifications are getting through (kAXWindowMovedNotification, kAXWindowResizedNotification, kAXValueChangedNotification etc - full list here), just not the kAXSelectedTextChangedNotification!
We've found that we can reproduce the error by removing accessibility permission for the app and rebooting our computers. After restarting and reenabling accessibility permissions, the kAXSelectedTextChangedNotification was not received, even though other notifications were fine.
Strangely, the issue can be resolved by launching Apple's Accessibility Inspector app on an impacted computer. Once the Accessibility Inspector is loaded, the kAXSelectedTextChangedNotifications start coming through as expected. This implies to me that either:
We are missing some needed setup when starting the observers. Accessibility Inspector gets it right, thus ‘starting’ the system properly.
Accessibility Inspector is using some Apple private APIs that we don’t have access to.
Things I’ve tried:
I've tried subscribing the AXSelectedTextChangedNotification to different AXUIElements, including the SystemWide element, the Application element, and children elements from the AXApplication. None of these received the kAXSelectedTextChangedNotification, until Accessibility Inspector is booted up. No surprises here, as Apple's documentation confirms that you should add the notification to the root Application AXUIElement if you want to receive notifications for all its children.
I had a theory that the issue might be due to my code calling AXUIElementCreateApplication multiple times, possibly creating multiple "Applications" in Apple's Accessibility implementation. If that’s the case, the notifications might be sent to the wrong application AXUIElement. However, refactoring my code to only call AXUIElementCreateApplication once didn't resolve the issue.
I thought the issue may be caused by subscribing the AXSelectedTextChangedNotification on the high-level application element (at odds with Apple's documentation). I've tried traversing the child AXUIElements until we find one with the kAXSelectedTextAttribute and then subscribing to that. This did not resolve the issue. I don’t think it's the correct path to continue exploring, given that the notifications are received correctly after AccessibilityInspector is launched.
There is one exception to the above: if I add the kSelectedTextChangedNotification listener to a specific text field AXUIElement, I do receive the notification on that text field. However, this is not practical; I need a solution that will work for all text fields within an app. The Accessibility Inspector appears to be doing something that causes the selected-text-changed notifications to be correctly passed up to the high-level application AXUIElement.
Another thought is that I could traverse the entire Accessibility hierarchy and add listeners to every subview that has the kAXSelectedTextAttribute. However, I don’t like this long-term solution. It will be slow and incomplete: new elements get added and removed frequently. I just want the kAXSelectedTextChangedNotification to be received by the high-level Application AXUIElement, which the documentation suggests it should be. I also have evidence that this can work, since notifications start coming through after Accessibility Inspector is launched. It’s just a matter of discovering how to replicate whatever Accessibility Inspector is doing.
An interesting wrinkle: I implemented the 'traverse' strategy above, but was surprised by how few elements were in the hierarchy. Most apps only go down ~2-3 levels, which didn't seem right to me. Perhaps the Accessibility tree isn't fully initialized? I tried adding a 5-second delay to allow more initialization time, but it didn't change anything.
Does anyone have any ideas? Here's our file.
We have an app under development which allows musicians to unlock contact details of people who posted about an upcoming event. The musician pays a fees to unlock this contact details.
Both the musician & the post owner are registered users. We will reveal the same contact info that the post owner used for account signup verification.
Questions:
Is this allowed? (given that we obtain consent to share contact info to other people and clearly mention this in privacy policy)
If yes, will we have to use App store in-app purchase to facilitate this transaction or are we free to use a payment processor such as Stripe.
Topic:
Accessibility & Inclusion
SubTopic:
General
I have more than 1000 notes classified in parent/child folders up to 5 levels. From the 5th level of files I can no longer share the note. The note is not shared. It is that of the parent file that is shared.
Thank you very much
Good to you
Christophe
Topic:
Accessibility & Inclusion
SubTopic:
General
Hello,
I am working on a Braille keyboard by using HID approach.
Current the device works with iPhone 11 and SE3.
However, when tested in iPhone 6s with iOS 15, although the device can be connected and recognized as Braille device in VoiceOver screen, the phone shows no response to key press report.
Would there be any requirement at points such as HID descriptor for iPhone 6s support on Braille device? If iPhone 6s does not support such devices, what is the minimum system requirements?
Thank you!
My game app is text-based interactive fiction, containing no audio/video content, making captions unnecessary. Our game is completely accessible to deaf users.
Despite this, in the Accessibility Nutrition Label, I'm only able to leave the "Captions" box checked or unchecked. Leaving it unchecked would leave deaf players with the wrong impression that they can't enjoy our game. Leaving it checked would imply that we do have A/V content with captions included.
In the WWDC video on this, https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2025/224/ the video says:
After we completed common tasks, we realized our app doesn’t have any video or audio only content. In this case, we aren’t going to indicate that Landmarks supports Captions. That's okay. This accurately describes the features that people will expect to be available while using the app.
Maybe that's "OK," but I wish the form allowed me to say "This app doesn't contain audio/video content."
Hi All,
I am develop the a braille keyboard with iOS, when I testing the typing function in notes , the screen update is very slow after typing, we suppose the respond should been instance change, I am not sure how to setup voiceover setting.
does any document supply on this issue?
or does a any guideline for this?
After 26 IOS update, the colors on my new iPad Pro M4 have become extremely dull almost like those on a very old device. The screen brightness is significantly reduced, and it's now difficult to see UI elements clearly. This is very disappointing considering the device’s high display quality before the update. Please advise if this is a known issue or if there's a fix.
Topic:
Accessibility & Inclusion
SubTopic:
General