- From: Wayne Dick <wed@csulb.edu>
- Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2011 15:21:25 -0800
- To: Shadi Abou-Zahra <shadi@w3.org>
- Cc: EOWG <w3c-wai-eo@w3.org>, BAD TF <public-wai-eo-badtf@w3.org>
Hi Shadi, Here is a little more precise information. Column bleeding starts at the break between 36x and 40px. Bleeding is really bad at 44px+. That is a reasonable print size for moderate low vision. Also my work around in the previous note doesn't work in Firefox-- just in Safari. You really should look at it in Firefox with the following settings: Set all font size to between 48-72px using the tools>options>content> [size][advanced] tool. This would be a good setting for someone with moderate low vision or mild legal blindness (20/70-20/400) and fair reading functionality. Then use view>page style>no style. Note how the expand / collapse menu content is buried, and hard to find in the forest of large print. The effect is very different from the expand all option. Also, the expand all / collapse all button just kind of hangs there in a weird document order. It should be right after or before the menu in reading order. Now, go back to your styling, but leave the font size at 48-72px. Also, choose any tab but Overview. You will notice that the line: "[DRAFT] How People with Disabilities Use the Web: ..." bleeds on itself. You must have used an absolute line-height on those pages. Cheers, Wayne
Received on Thursday, 10 March 2011 23:23:31 UTC