- From: Gian Sampson-Wild <gian@tkh.com.au>
- Date: Sun, 1 Jul 2007 18:39:23 +1000
- To: "'Loretta Guarino Reid'" <lorettaguarino@google.com>
- Cc: <public-comments-WCAG20@w3.org>
Comment 57: Source: http://www.w3.org/mid/001f01c695f9$31b504e0$9288b23a@tkhcomputer (Issue ID: LC-1081) Example 2: As previously discussed, people who use screen readers (people with vision impairments and people with dyslexia) expect that the order of the site with CSS on matches the order of the site with CSS off Proposed Change: Change this example so that the order of the content is the same with CSS on or off ---------------------------- Response from Working Group: ---------------------------- Success criteria 1.3.2 (formerly 1.3.3) does not require that the reading order be the same with CSS off as with it on. It only requires that if the order can change the meaning, the correct order can be determined. Example 2 is therefore an appropriate illustration of conforming to this success criterion. ---------------------------- Response from GSW: ---------------------------- Matching the order of the HTML with CSS on to CSS off is important to people with dyslexia using screen readers as well as keyboard users. These people use the visual presentation of the page but operate via the underlying HTML - therefore it is important that both match.
Received on Sunday, 1 July 2007 08:39:48 UTC