Re: Please vote on proposed WCAG 2.1 SC for Color Contrast of User Interface Components

> I do not subscribe to the logic that text is always much harder, and using that to oppose the SC is just as futile since there is no research to back it up either.

There isn’t any research the other way either, that I’ve seen.

NB: I’m not opposing it, I’m trying to deal with comments from Gregg and others on the Graphics Contrast SC. Currently I don’t have a repost.


>I can say interpreting complicated plots with several line and/or symbol types or busy diagrams is certainly not much easier than reading text.

I’m sure that has extra cognitive load, but I’m less sure it has the same level of acuity needed?  They are generally thicker and better spaced out than text (even on maps and circuit diagrams). Perhaps not all the time, but it has be balanced against the need for multiple colours, as using 4.5:1 with multiple colours is far harder than with text on a background.


> graphics often contain a lot of text anyway (e.g. scales, labels, legends, etc.).  These aren’t covered by WCAG 2.0 because the definition for “images of text” excludes images with other significant visual content.

Interesting, a diagram with text in it would avoid 1.4.5 images of text, but a diagram with separate images for each label would fail under that SC.

Maybe we should extend graphics contrast to images of text? E.g.
“The visual presentation of graphical objects and images of text that are essential for understanding…”


> consider color blindness.  For these users, it’s not about following anything; it’s just about seeing it.  If I make a very simple icon using two conflicting hues with the same luminance, what accessible path do they take to see it?

Luminance is the basis for the contast check, so if the whole icon is a ‘graphical object’, then the outer part of that graphic are what is required to differentiate it from the surrounding (both colours against the background, but not between each other).

If you need to distinguish the colours within the icon to understand it, then each is a graphical object and it should distinguish against each other and the background (assuming they are both adjacent to the background).

Cheers,

-Alastair

Received on Tuesday, 13 June 2017 16:22:46 UTC