Dokus Accessibility
Version 1, effective July 2, 2026
Dokus is built entirely on Apple's native components, which is also what makes it work with iOS's accessibility features out of the box. This page summarizes what's supported today.
VoiceOver
Every screen you need for the app's core tasks, such as adding a document, viewing one, unlocking with Face ID, sharing, and subscribing, is labeled for VoiceOver. Document cards announce their name and locked state, and Face ID prompts announce progress and failure out loud.
Voice Control
Dokus uses standard, system-provided controls throughout, so their spoken names match what's on screen and they respond to Voice Control commands like "Tap [name]" with no extra setup.
Larger Text
The app supports Dynamic Type end to end, including the largest accessibility text sizes: text and layouts, including onboarding, scale and reflow instead of truncating.
Sufficient Contrast
Text uses colors that meet accessible contrast ratios against their background, in both light and dark mode.
Dark Interface
Dokus follows your system appearance automatically and is designed for dark mode from the ground up, so colors, materials, and imagery all adapt.
Differentiate Without Color
Status is never conveyed by color alone: a locked document shows a lock icon and label, not just a dimmed tile, and a Face ID error shows a warning icon alongside the red text.
Reduced Motion
When you turn on Reduce Motion, Dokus turns off decorative animation, such as the home screen's card wiggle and add/remove transitions, while staying fully functional.
Captions & Audio Descriptions
Not applicable: Dokus has no video or audio content.
Feedback
Accessibility is an ongoing effort. If something doesn't work well with assistive technology, tell us: contact@dokus.app.