Re: [Tutorial Feedback]

Hi Diane,

Thank you for taking the time to write. We've reworded this sentence to "People using software that only shows the main content of a web page, such as people with cognitive disabilities, will receive better results if the page structure is correctly marked up."

It will show up when we update the page.

Best,
~Shawn
<http://www.w3.org/People/Shawn/>

On 12/3/2015 8:29 AM, Atkinson, Diane wrote:
> I have a suggestion on rewording
>
> *Page Structure Concepts *
>
> *Excerpt from below*
>
> *People using distraction-free reading plugins*will receive better results if the main content is easily to determine
>
> Suggestion:
>
> results if the main content is easy to determine
>
> or
>
> results if the main content is more easily determined.
>
> *Why is this important?*
>
> The content of the page is the reason people are visiting websites in the first place. Being unable to find content or navigate inside individual pages can create major accessibility barriers. An accessible page structure benefits users in many situations such as:
>
>   * *People using screen readers*can skip to the content directly and navigate to sections that are important to them. Content is read out in the way it is intended.
>   * *People using distraction-free reading plugins*will receive better results if the main content is easily to determine.
>   * *People using certain browser plugins*can use landmark roles to jump to specific sections on a page.
>   * *Keyboard users*can save the time and trouble to navigate through a number of links using the tab key.
>   * *Search engines*can use the data to make better predictions on the real content of a web page.
>

Received on Tuesday, 8 December 2015 13:57:18 UTC