- From: Charles McCathieNevile <chaals@opera.com>
- Date: Thu, 03 Sep 2009 18:11:28 +0600
On Wed, 02 Sep 2009 15:38:00 +0600, ~:'' ??????????? <j.chetwynd at btinternet.com> wrote: > Chaals, > > thanks for yet another well considered and easy-to-read response*! > your comments around ARIA and SVG are noted. > > however you fail to address the central issue, which as Filipe Sanches > wrote me in a private email, and which I believe correctly states the > case: > >> Implementing it is not trivial and that is why this kind of thing >> should be available as a general module. Preferably as part of the spec >> in order to get it into every UA. > > my query was intended to address this issue in particular. ie as to why > whereas accessible html forms had been around for about a decade, > accessible svg forms remain extremely hard to implement. Because for SVG there was nothing formal like ARIA until now. There was the idea foreshadowed in the svg-access note[1] a decade ago of using metadata to tag objects - this dates from the very early days of what became ARIA, in discussions with Lisa Seeman of UBAccess and Rich Schwerdtfeger of IBM who followed this work through the spec editing process that eventually got us ARIA. There was also work on using Xforms, for example the experimental work of X-smiles and the work of Sebastian Schnitzenbaumer. Unfortunately that never got traction for a variety of reasons (not least the failure of XHTML, meaning that little effort was made to develop better tools for the public to create content). Effectively this was because there were not enough people working actively on making SVG accessible - so we are not much further ahead than we were 8 years ago. Given the new and renewed interest in SVG by people who understand accessibility, I expect to see much more progress in the next 2 years. > SVG1.1 has now been implemented by many UA and browsers, but still miss > this vital "user" functionality. Yes. So we are only now arriving at the stage of making this really possible. With ARIA in the spec, and with at least Opera working on implementation, it should become possible. > There is a structural fault in the W3C process, and that is why process > are copied into this thread. I think that should be a seperate thread - fixing the process and fixing the SVG problem are things that need to be done by different people. Mixing the two is likely to lead to more discussion about process and less action on anything :( cheers Chaals -- Charles McCathieNevile Opera Software, Standards Group je parle fran?ais -- hablo espa?ol -- jeg l?rer norsk http://my.opera.com/chaals Try Opera: http://www.opera.com
Received on Thursday, 3 September 2009 05:11:28 UTC