Re: Use of colour

Hi Steve

I didn't misunderstand. I realise it's comparing the backgrounds. But it says 'this would not pass use of colour' - as far as I'm concerned, if there is a suitable alternative, it should pass. Therefore it implies the text colour change is not a suitable alternative.

I am not talking about any other sc than 1.4.1 - I was asking whether the difference in lightness between the black text and the white text is impacted by the change of background colour. This is when we are calculating the change of lightness (by seeking a ratio of 3:1 or above)

I am asking if the background of text impacts it's lightness. In the case it does, you can't just compare black text and white text for use of colour. Because they aren't just black text and white text in the same static context. Their lightness would be impacted by the different backgrounds. I wondered if that was why the example given said it was a fail of use of colour, even though it doesn't seem to be a fail of use of colour due to the fact the text changes from white to black.

Thanks

Sarah



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________________________________
From: Steve Green <steve.green@testpartners.co.uk>
Sent: Thursday, July 13, 2023 2:58:35 PM
To: Ms J <ms.jflz.woop@gmail.com>; bryan rasmussen <rasmussen.bryan@gmail.com>
Cc: w3c-wai-ig@w3.org <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
Subject: RE: Use of colour


You are misunderstanding what the page is saying. It’s saying that the change of background colour from mid blue to light blue alone would not be conformant. However, that change is redundant because the change of text colour has sufficient contrast.



Focus indicator contrast measurements can be difficult to understand because several success criteria are involved, but one or more may not be relevant depending on the design.



If the focus indication relies on a change of colour of the text and/or background, SC 1.4.1 applies and the change of colour must have a contrast ratio of at least 3:1. SC 1.4.3 (Colour Contrast) applies to the text, but SC 1.4.11 (Non-text Contrast) does not apply.



If the focus indicator is an outline, SC 1.4.1 does not apply, and SC 1.4.11 applies to the adjacent colours. No comparison is made with the original colours. SC 1.4.3 also applies.



Steve Green

Managing Director

Test Partners Ltd





From: Ms J <ms.jflz.woop@gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, July 13, 2023 1:46 PM
To: bryan rasmussen <rasmussen.bryan@gmail.com>
Cc: w3c-wai-ig@w3.org
Subject: Re: Use of colour



Hi Patrick



Yes, agreed, that is what we tend to do, but the example in the guidelines does say it fails even though the text changes from white to black.



I was wondering if perhaps we would need to do something else like calculate the colour contrast of the text against the background when unfocused and then the text against the background when focused and then somehow compare these two ratios, but I don't think it works like that does it? Because contrast ratios are relative to the colours being used so you can't somehow work out the ratio between two ratios...



But anyway, as long as I have clarified that it's ok to compare the text in isolation for use of colour, and not somehow factor in the background colour change, I am satisfied I'm approaching it right. Thank you!



Sarah



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From: bryan rasmussen <rasmussen.bryan@gmail.com<mailto:rasmussen.bryan@gmail.com>>
Sent: Thursday, July 13, 2023 1:10:35 PM
To: Ms J <ms.jflz.woop@gmail.com<mailto:ms.jflz.woop@gmail.com>>
Cc: w3c-wai-ig@w3.org<mailto:w3c-wai-ig@w3.org> <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org<mailto:w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>>
Subject: Re: Use of colour



you can find code that will help to automatically set the color of your background or your text colors based on a desired contrast and what your wished for colors are, hard to say specifically as not sure what you are using - I wrote something to do it in 2013 for Sass, but don't have it anymore but it looks like this does the same https://jonnykates.medium.com/automating-colour-contrast-ratios-with-sass-e201f3b52797




there is also a color-contrast function in css, but not really available in anything by developer branches yet.



Hopefully you can just adjust your colors by hand to make the text either 1. slightly bigger 2. darker 3. the background lighter.





On Thu, Jul 13, 2023 at 1:45 PM Ms J <ms.jflz.woop@gmail.com<mailto:ms.jflz.woop@gmail.com>> wrote:

Hi Brian



Just to clarify, I'm looking at the contrast between the black text and the white text to ensure that the difference in hue is sufficient to act as a change in lightness for the use of colour sc.



Please can you advise on how to calculate the difference in contrast between the white text and black text taking the background colour into account. I don't think there's guidance re calculating lightness directly?



Thanks



Sarah



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From: bryan rasmussen <rasmussen.bryan@gmail.com<mailto:rasmussen.bryan@gmail.com>>
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Cc: w3c-wai-ig@w3.org<mailto:w3c-wai-ig@w3.org> <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org<mailto:w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>>
Subject: Re: Use of colour



Yes, the background is important as to whether or not the color has enough contrast, contrast is related to both the color and background it is on.



On Thu, Jul 13, 2023 at 1:29 PM Ms J <ms.jflz.woop@gmail.com<mailto:ms.jflz.woop@gmail.com>> wrote:

Hello



Please can someone advise on use of colour.



I understand a change in hue of at least 3:1 contrast should indicate a sufficient change in lightness.



However, is this dependent on the background colour staying constant? For example, if a focus indicator is a change in text colour from black to white, does that pass use of colour? The example in the screenshot I have attached says it does not pass (from the non-text contrast guideline). The change in text colour if you measure directly, white to black, does exceed 3:1. I would have thought this passed?



Does it matter that the buttons background colour also changes? Does this break the ability to compare the lightness by just comparing the colour contrast ratio and checking it exceeds 3:1?



Thanks



Sarah



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Received on Thursday, 13 July 2023 14:45:45 UTC