- From: Deyan Ginev <deyan.ginev@gmail.com>
- Date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 12:24:40 -0400
- To: public-mathml4@w3.org
Dear MathML Refresh enthusiasts, A very pleasing review article was published at DistillPub today, examining the various communication aspects of "interactive articles". In Figure 8 they have a small SVG showcase of a feature some of us here have experimented with in the past via MathML, providing a short "legend" of each constituent of a math expression. Pieces of their example directly overlap with our main scope (names for dot product, integral over closed surface), and pieces are in the gray zone we are currently discussing (q is "the amount of charge in coulombs") https://distill.pub/2020/communicating-with-interactive-articles/#details-math They also linked to a nice older resource I remember, which seemingly introduced the didactic technique of coloring math in web documents with colored text in parallel: https://betterexplained.com/articles/colorized-math-equations/ One thing to remark is that this "details-on-demand" application is out-of-scope for our "a11y semantics" charter. At the same time, the application is - at least in my mind - requiring the same "degree of annotation" to be enabled, as the minimal requirements are 1) knowing the operator structure/content tree and 2) knowing the names/properties of the constituent objects. So this may be a "sibling" or "cousin" application to the a11y/information retrieval applications we've been discussing. Something to chew on, and wishing everyone a great weekend! Greetings, Deyan
Received on Friday, 11 September 2020 16:25:20 UTC