- From: Patrick H. Lauke <redux@splintered.co.uk>
- Date: Tue, 28 Jun 2016 21:33:35 +0100
- To: GLWAI Guidelines WG org <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>, "public-mobile-a11y-tf@w3.org" <public-mobile-a11y-tf@w3.org>
On 28/06/2016 21:02, Gregg Vanderheiden wrote: > help me understand here. > > I don’t see anything much about locking orientation that is an access > problem. > > if you lock it vertical — then I can’t use the horizontal trick to make > the screen larger — (which I always use) — but instead have to turn to zoom. > > But for many, turning the screen sideways zooms it a bit but not enough > so they have to zoom anyway. So it isnt a show stopper like some > things. It just makes us introduce horizontal scrolling for some more > people. > > > > Is there a barrier I am missing? Yes, situations where a user can't turn the screen sideways (for instance, because they use a tablet that's solidly mounted in one particular orientation and attached to their powered wheelchair)...but I see you mention it later in your email: > One I can think of is a person With a physical disability who has his > tablet mounted in one direction, and if he goes to a page that forces > him in other orientation then he can’t turn it. > But it seems to me that > this is already true for many apps and they are causing a problem, which WCAG currently doesn't have any SCs to tackle it with. > and I haven’t seen any websites that > only work in landscape. They're out there. For a sampling, see https://www.google.co.uk/search?q="please+turn+your+device" Many sites currently do this sort of thing in a very primitive way (they check the browser window/viewport width/height and, if it's not in the "correct" ratio, they simply put a big roadblock in front of the content until the user changes the ratio/turns the device. As noted earlier in this thread, there are now more robust standards/techniques coming (screen orientation API, CSS directives that lock a view into a particular orientation, directives in progressive web app JSON manifests that explicitly set a locked orientation). And again, WCAG currently doesn't have the tools to flag this as a problem. P -- Patrick H. Lauke www.splintered.co.uk | https://github.com/patrickhlauke http://flickr.com/photos/redux/ | http://redux.deviantart.com twitter: @patrick_h_lauke | skype: patrick_h_lauke
Received on Tuesday, 28 June 2016 20:34:08 UTC