- From: Gregory J. Rosmaita <oedipus@hicom.net>
- Date: Wed, 5 May 2010 16:23:35 +0100
- To: wai-xtech@w3.org
aloha! this is a fullfilment of an action item assigned to me by the PFWG to review the "View Mode Media Feature" document; the document, is an explanatory document, which defines terms which relate to various "view modes" -- this is more an informational review than a critique, as i believes it behooves all WAI working groups to agree-upon and converge upon the common vocabulary that the "View Mode Media Feature" document seeks to provide, which is why this has been posted to the WAI-XTECH list, rather than the member-confidential PF emailing list. the first important part of this document is the list of definitions, enumerated at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2010/WD-view-mode-20100420/#definitions QUOTE View mode The view mode is the manner in which a Web application is presented to a user that corresponds to the metaphors and functionalities in use on a given platform. This specification defines a number of view modes that a user agent is expected to match to comparable platform-specific situations. Chrome The chrome comprises the visible parts of the user agent that do not depend on the content (e.g. window decorations, tool bars, title bars, menus). Immersive A user interface is said to be immersive when its controls and components are created to match the specific style of the application instead of using the chrome and widgets of the platform. Media feature The term media feature is defined in [MEDIAQ]. http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-css3-mediaqueries-20090915/ Screen area The area of the screen that is generally available for applications, excluding parts that the system generally keeps to itself (e.g. a bar at the top for menus, time, or context, or at the bottom with a list of running applications). Web application A Web application is an application built and shipped using Web technology that may be running inside of a browser, as a widget, or in another type of container designed for this purpose. Widgets The term widget is defined in [WIDGETS]. http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-widgets-20091201/ Viewport The term viewport is defined in [CSS21]. http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-CSS2-20090423/visuren.html#x1 UNQUOTE second is the explanation of the "view-mode" media feature QUOTE The view-mode media feature describes the mode in which the Web application is being shown as a running application on the platform. * Value: windowed | floating | fullscreen | maximized | minimized * Applies to: visual and tactile media types * Accepts min/max prefixes: No A user agent should make a best-effort attempt at matching the great variety of platform conventions in which it may be running a Web application to the list of view modes defined in this specification so that the view-mode media feature may describe common situations in a manner that is useful to authors. UNQUOTE the third important component of the View Mode Media Feature is the enumeration of values which the view-mode media feature accepts: QUOTE 5.1 View modes The view-mode media feature accepts the following enumerated values: windowed Describes a Web application running in a windowed manner, which is to say with chrome and without occupying the entire screen area. floating Describes a Web application providing a more immersive interface, running in a windowed manner but without chrome, and with the viewport's initial background being transparent such that other system items (other applications, the display's background...) can be seen through parts of the viewport that are not being painted to. fullscreen Describes a Web application that is occupying the entirety of the display, including the parts normally excluded from the screen area (e.g. a fullscreen video). maximized Describes a Web application that is occupying the entirety of the screen area minimized Describes a Web application docked or otherwise minimised, but with a dynamic graphical representation being available nevertheless (i.e. the application isn't entirely hidden, or maybe its icon is still shown and it has control over what it contains). This may correspond for instance to a thumbnail of the application's content being shown. UNQUOTE gregory. ----------------------------------------------------------------- LANGUAGE, n. The music with which we charm the serpents guarding another's treasure. -- Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary ----------------------------------------------------------------- Gregory J. Rosmaita, oedipus@hicom.net Camera Obscura: http://www.hicom.net/~oedipus/index.html UBATS: United Blind Advocates for Talking Signs: http://ubats.org -----------------------------------------------------------------
Received on Wednesday, 5 May 2010 15:24:08 UTC