Re: Updates to Understanding 1.4.11 part 2

I'm nervous about requiring momentary transient states to pass. Its new
territory for WCAG. It hard on testers and hard on developers, for little
good. It could significantly affect conformance costs, for little benefit
and make it more difficult for jurisdictions to adopt the new standard.

I think we should add something such as "momentary transition states such
as 'active' are hard to register visually for all users and are not
considered visible".

Cheers,
David MacDonald



*Can**Adapt* *Solutions Inc.*

Tel:  613.235.4902

LinkedIn
<http://www.linkedin.com/in/davidmacdonald100>

twitter.com/davidmacd

GitHub <https://github.com/DavidMacDonald>

www.Can-Adapt.com <http://www.can-adapt.com/>



*  Adapting the web to all users*
*            Including those with disabilities*

If you are not the intended recipient, please review our privacy policy
<http://www.davidmacd.com/disclaimer.html>

On Wed, Jun 13, 2018 at 5:38 PM, Alastair Campbell <acampbell@nomensa.com>
wrote:

> > I can agree with that half-way: as long as the author has not modified
> the background, then yes, the native foreground is a User Agent problem.
>
>
>
> As I’ve said, that virtually never happens because people set the
> background on the page, without thinking about the individual links on the
> page. Even when setting the background to the same as the default (in most
> cases white), presumably that counts as setting it?
>
>
>
> > Even in the extreme edge-case of a style sheet with *body
> {background-color: #FFF;}*, yet still allowing the native focus color…
>
>
>
> This is not an ‘edge’ case at all, in just the sample we looked at it
> affects Github, WAI, Adobe, & Facebook. Not for all links, but some. (All
> links on the WAI site I think, we only looked at the main nav in the
> examples, but I think the content links fail on Mac with this
> interpretation.)
>
>
>
>
>
> > in that instance to remain unstyled, is a conscious [sic] decision to
> stay with defaults that are known to be inaccessible
>
>
>
> Especially in big teams, people working on components are often not the
> same people who set the background of the page. Also, if you set the page
> to white, suddenly you would fail even though it is the same as the browser
> default!
>
>
>
> As Eric mentioned, the default Mac focus styles are much more obvious to
> most people in most cases, mainly because they are thicker. (See example
> 17 <https://alastairc.ac/tests/wcag21-examples/non-text-contrast.html>,
> there are 5 images from different browsers under ‘focus’, and the most
> obvious one to me is the 4th, at 1.7:1.)
>
>
>
> Github (and others) even copy that style manually because people
> think/assume it is a good setting.
>
>
>
> Cheers,
>
>
>
> -Alastair
>

Received on Thursday, 14 June 2018 01:03:55 UTC