Some screen readers announce the number of links on a page as soon as the page finishes loading in the browser.NVDA and JAWS, for example, precede headings with “heading level 1.” Screen readers announce headings and identify the heading level.If an image without alternative text is a link, screen readers will generally read the link destination (the href attribute in the HTML markup) or may read the image file name.Screen readers ignore images without alternative text and say nothing, but users can set their preferences to read the file name.JAWS precedes the alternative text with the word “graphic.” If the image is a link, JAWS precedes the alternative text with “graphic link." Screen readers will read the alternative text of images, if alt text is present.Screen readers announce the page title (the element in the HTML markup) when first loading a web page.
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