- From: Steve Faulkner <faulkner.steve@gmail.com>
- Date: Sat, 11 Jan 2014 09:56:03 +0000
- To: Mallory van Achterberg <stommepoes@stommepoes.nl>
- Cc: HTMLWG WG <public-html@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CA+ri+V=5OJxTMi9+DHiHe_4Gxkvq_PhOEiODYVKA8upGVp1Tjw@mail.gmail.com>
Hi Mallory, I tend to agree that it is useful and that the provision of alt for an image map img does not mean that the end user needs to have it announced/displayed. UA's could provide a preference to suppress alt on img map images if it is such an annoyance. I think the provision of alt should be based on whether the image is informative/decorative etc.regardless of if the image is also being used as an image map. I also think that we need to look at examples of usage in the wild to get some data, I am currently grepping some pages to find image maps and will provide data for analysis when done. -- Regards SteveF HTML 5.1 <http://www.w3.org/html/wg/drafts/html/master/> On 8 January 2014 08:48, Mallory van Achterberg <stommepoes@stommepoes.nl>wrote: > On Wed, Jan 08, 2014 at 12:49:11AM +0200, Jukka K. Korpela wrote: > > 2014-01-07 22:42, Patrick H. Lauke wrote: > > >On 07/01/2014 18:18, Jukka K. Korpela wrote: > > >>Specifically, in the case being discussed, if you hear (or see) text > > >>that tells you to select between North Katoomba and South Katoomba, how > > >>would the text ”Map of Katoomba” help you (when you do not see the > map)? > > > > > >It would help to understand the context of those links, i.e. that > > >there is a map and that the user can select different regions of > > >that map to get to the content? > > > > > > > In the example, the context had been specified in the text, and the > > map does not add to it. > > > > How would it help to know that there is a map when you cannot see > > that map? > > It's especially useful when multiple people are working and referring > to the same document. > > Also not all blind people are 100% blind. It's useful as a user to > know what the blob is everyone else is talking about. Oh, that image? > it's a map of Katoomba. Now when your colleagues say "yeah that text > under the Katoomba map" you're not totally lost and feeling like you > can't keep up with everyone because some web dev didn't think it > necessary to let you know things everyone else seems to Just Know. > > Sorry just my UserFrustration speaking. It's useful to know there is > an image, and it's useful to know what it's an image OF. It also > helps when silly people send HTML email to a text-only client and > you wonder if that image is something important, related to the text > you can read, or something you can safely ignore. > > -Mallory > >
Received on Saturday, 11 January 2014 09:57:12 UTC