- From: Neil Whiteley <neil.whiteley@tag2.net>
- Date: Sat, 26 Mar 2005 10:58:31 -0000
- To: "'Gregg Vanderheiden'" <gv@trace.wisc.edu>
- Cc: <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>
Hi Gregg, I hope that you don't mind me commenting but perhaps the following might be a solution: Firstly, a "requirement" is a "requirement", irrespective of whether it is currently possible to satisfy. A requirement that cannot be satisfied yet, for whatever reason, cannot be eliminated, only deferred. So what do you do with a guideline (SC) that is impossible to satisfy in the current environment? You need to find a way to defer it until such time as it becomes possible to satisfy. The techniques doc should only offer techniques that are possible. At least one technique should be offered per SC in order to *show* that it is actually possible to satisfy the SC and to demonstrate *how* it might be done. If there is no current way to satisfy the SC, the SC must be deferred. Theoretical techniques will only be confusing to stakeholders. It is not necessary (or desirable I would imagine) to document every possible technique for every SC. As you say, it's not the techniques that are required. Deferred guidelines do not need and cannot have techniques because there aren't any yet. How do you defer a guideline (SC) because there is no current technique to satisfy it? Possible solutions might be: 1. Remove them from the current version and re-instate in a later version as and when the barriers are removed. This would require a separate set of documents that shows which SCs are deferred and why. 2. Create a level 4, just for deferred SCs, and promote them as the barriers are removed. This way, you can have a techniques document for level 4 SCs that is just informative. As long as it is clearly stated that this level is included for completeness only, it would be acceptable IMHO. 3. Leave them in the guidelines (where they are) knowing that authors will not be able to satisfy the requirements and write techniques that are not possible to implement. Neil Neil Whiteley -------------------- Tag2 -----Original Message----- From: w3c-wai-gl-request@w3.org [mailto:w3c-wai-gl-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Gregg Vanderheiden Sent: 26 March 2005 06:45 To: jasonw@ariel.its.unimelb.edu.au Cc: 'John M Slatin'; 'Al Gilman'; Subject: RE: Key results and recommendations from Face to Face Hi Jason, More confused now. The discussion below starts with assuming that we require something that can't be done. Then define a technique in the techniques doc to do it. But it still can't be done yet because User Agents don't support the technique. But because there is nothing else - this is the only way to do it so it is normative. I'm sure I did this wrong but that is what I got. Let me explain some things and see if it helps focus the discussion. First - we can't put something in guidelines that can't be done. But perhaps you mean it can be done with one technology but not another. So lets work with that. If it can't be done with this "second" technology - then the way to advocate for it would be in papers or other standards. Or working with user agent manufacturers. We shouldn't put something in the techniques doc as required if it can't already be done. If we did put something in techniques that isn't already a standard, it would be advisory. Because the techniques cannot make something 'the standard way'. It can only list it as a suggestion. And the guidelines do not require that you follow the techniques. the techniques help you understand what the guidelines require and give you some techniques for doing it. It cannot require any technique be used. If there is only one way that satisfies the guideline (SC) then the techniques doc can inform authors of it. But it cannot require it. And if there is another technique that is not in the techniques doc that would satisfy the SC then it still would satisfy the SC even if it is not in the techniques doc. That is - the techniques doc can neither make something 'required' by including it or make it not acceptable by omitting it. Does this make sense now? Do you see a hole I don't see? Gregg -- ------------------------------ Gregg C Vanderheiden Ph.D. Professor - Ind. Engr. & BioMed Engr. Director - Trace R & D Center University of Wisconsin-Madison -----Original Message----- From: w3c-wai-gl-request@w3.org [mailto:w3c-wai-gl-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Jason White Sent: Friday, March 25, 2005 6:39 PM To: Gregg Vanderheiden Cc: 'John M Slatin'; 'Al Gilman'; w3c-wai-gl@w3.org Subject: RE: Key results and recommendations from Face to Face Gregg Vanderheiden writes: > Hi Jason, > > I still don't follow your thoughts. Help me here. > > If there are several acceptable methods then there are several acceptable > methods. > > If there is only one - then there is only one. > > What is in the techniques doc does not change that fact. Being in the > techniques doc may make one approach more known. And it may give the user > of the technique more evidence that it is a good technique. And it may be > used more. (is that what you mean by de-facto standard?). But it does not > make it normative. And it does not require the user to use it to conform. Perhaps an example would help to clarify the distinctions. Suppose we decided that we wanted a means of distinguishing "layout" tables in HTML from genuine data tables. The HTML spec doesn't provide for this, and in order to be practically useful the chosen technique would have to be adopted by authors and authoring tools. It would also have to be recognized by user agents and assistive technologies. What is needed, then, is an agreed upon technique that content and software developers could implement, each under the expectation that the other parties would support it. The question, then, is how this technique would be chosen, given that there are various ways (consistently with the HTML spec) of glossing the semantics of table markup. Now if WCAG techniques were to step in at this point and recommend one usage as the norm, then we would be trying to set a standard in the techniques rather than recording established facts, with the expectation that software and content developers would follow what was in the techniques. Of course it might be argued that the techniques would just be making one of these methods better known; but the problem is that there aren't really, in this case, two or more acceptable methods; the technique will only work if it's adopted by tool and user agent developers. Having an agreed upon technique is almost more important than what the technique is. The issue I understood Al to be raising is how these issues would be settled at the technology-specific level if WCAG didn't provide normative requirements at this level. Such a problem is distinct from the so-called "baseline" issue, but it does raise important questions.
Received on Saturday, 26 March 2005 10:59:07 UTC