Going left to right the electronegativity increases which polarizes the bond to make it more acidic.
Going down a group, the electronegativity does not increase, yet acidity increases as Winga noted. This is due to decreasing heterolytic bond strength from increasing anion size.
Does acidity/basicity depend on both electronegativity and bond length/strength across the period and down the group?
Across the period, as the bond lengths of H-C, H-N, H-O and H-F, are similar, so the electronegativity effect becomes the dominant factor, right?
Down the group, as the bond lengths from HF to HI increase significantly, so using the differences in bond strength to explain is prefer to electronegativity, right?
By the way, can we use thermodynamics and kinetics simultaneously to explain the acidity/basicity?