- From: Carlos Iglesias <carlos.iglesias@fundacionctic.org>
- Date: Tue, 5 Apr 2005 12:59:17 +0200
- To: "Charles McCathieNevile" <charles@sidar.org>, "Nils Ulltveit-Moe" <nils@u-moe.no>
- Cc: <public-wai-ert@w3.org>
> -----Mensaje original----- > De: Charles McCathieNevile [mailto:charles@sidar.org] > Enviado el: martes, 05 de abril de 2005 7:43 > Para: Nils Ulltveit-Moe > CC: Carlos Iglesias; public-wai-ert@w3.org > Asunto: Re: Locating the subject and dynamic content > > On Sun, 03 Apr 2005 17:15:28 +1000, Nils Ulltveit-Moe <nils@u-moe.no> > wrote: > > > However, if the assessing tool saved the web page that was > assessed, > > then a line number reference would hit the correct spot on > the saved > > page. A web designer would then see exactly where the > problem occurred. > > Other pointing strategies should work the saved page as well. > > Administrating the saved pages could be done by the accessibility > > assessment tools by providing web proxies pointing to the saved, > > static versions of the assessed pages. > > Mvh. > > Yeah, but this is a right pain for the tools, and really not > feasible for tools working on large sites (where we can > expect, due to the quirks of how society works, to have > implementation of monitoring systems). > > Carlos can comment better on the details, but although TAW > saves some content it doesn't save enough to be able to work > offline, and going part way there isn't so useful - you need > to be able to work on the entire page including embedded > objects like images, and you need to know if it has changed > online too. Well, there are not many details to comment, TAW save just the (x)html and uses it to do some tasks (for example a source view were you can see highlighted the problems) TAW retrive from the web other objects when needed (for example when a visual report is generated) > Solving that problem is close enough to solving the > persistence problem (to the extent we can) that I suspect it > is better ust to work on the premise that we don't > necessarily keep an offline version. (There is nothing to > stop that of course. Thinking about it, having an offline > version to show something might be an interesting approach to > providing some evidence to back up a claim that was made at a > particular time, too. > Although I would be surprised to see it become common practice) As you pointed, an offline stamp could be useful because the claim is always time dependent, so when you save a project with TAW the source is saved too within the results. Regards, CI.
Received on Tuesday, 5 April 2005 10:59:56 UTC