Re: perpendicular split pane control (3 panes: 1 vertical, 2 horizontal)

My suggestion is to allow the user agent to sort it out.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Earl Johnson" <Earl.Johnson@Sun.COM>
To: "Diego La Monica (IWA/HWG)" <d.lamonica@webprofession.com>
Cc: <wai-xtech@w3.org>
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 8:30 PM
Subject: Re: perpendicular split pane control (3 panes: 1 vertical, 2 
horizontal)



Hi Diego;

A third option is to re-purpose F6 and F8 so they perform the
same way as many applications on the Solaris and Windows
platform. This has been done aleady [which ones Becky?], at least
from a feasibility persptive. For example, I know Becky has been
able in repurpose the Cntrl+Tab Key combo, which jumps you from
Tab to Tab in the browser and in other UI components, so it acts
locally on the widget vs. working globally and bringing the user
to the browser's next Tab panel.

This is why I posted my question earlier - I'm not sure if this
work group and others in the community favor - use the use the
same keynav key sequences as those used in the underlying
platform *or* define [or find] key sequences that aren't being
used by various browsers or other AT. Hopefully you saw my
quandry email earlier on this topic, please feel free to weigh in
on it.

Earl



Diego La Monica (IWA/HWG) wrote:

> Hi Earl,
>
> *Earl Johnson*:
>
>
>     Hi All;
>
>     The "standard" in Java/Swing and Microsoft's UI toolkit [and
>     IBM's guidelines] appears to be pressing the F6 moves between
>     panes and pressing F8 gives focus to the Splitter Bar itself.
>      From there, the user interacts with the up-down, left-right
>     movement depending on whether the splitter bar is an up-down or
>     left-right type of splitter.
>
>     A question for the list: Can't these key sequences be used? If
>     they can't, why?
>
>
> Diego La Monica:
> In Inernet Explorer (I've tested with 6 and 7), F6 gives the focus to
> the address bar, I don't think it's feasible because it's still the most
> used browse.
> F6 Seems to be free in Firefox, Opera and Safari for Windows, in
> Netscape 8.1.3 the F6 gives focus to the search bar.
> Instead F8 seems to be free in all the browser except than Opera that
> gives focus to the address bar.
>
> So there are 2 solutions for your issue: the browser vendors need to
> change their shortcuts to improve the user experience or we have to
> choose for a different key sequences.
>
> Cheers
> --
> Diego La Monica (IWA/HWG)

Received on Thursday, 14 February 2008 02:43:13 UTC