- From: John Foliot <john.foliot@deque.com>
- Date: Wed, 29 Jun 2016 12:35:27 -0500
- To: "Patrick H. Lauke" <redux@splintered.co.uk>
- Cc: WCAG <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>, "public-mobile-a11y-tf@w3.org" <public-mobile-a11y-tf@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAKdCpxyGj3UBiCqsw3gVaYEg8PM5E5NZ7W=5sU5iCk8zJUSS=g@mail.gmail.com>
Hi all, I have to agree with Patrick here. If the goal is to try and apply some type of retro-active SC requirement language to WCAG 2.0 to address known and seen issues in the wild today, I start getting twitchy: any move that makes sites that are compliant today to WCAG 2.0 (usability put aside for a minute) non-compliant tomorrow is a deal-breaker, so for clarity sake, this newly proposed language and 'conditions', while I agree are important, are only applicable to sites claiming WCAG 2.1 conformance - correct? If this is the case, then yes, we can strengthen the definition language by modifying an existing 'point' (David's proposed Point 2 edit) or by adding a new 'point' (the proposed Point 8 definition). However, as Patrick points out, WCAG 2.1 will also include requirements that have emerged for small-screen/touch devices that, when written well (platform agnostic) then the requirements for a compliant WCAG 2.1 site will be applicable for both of the 'views' we are discussing, whether optimised for large-screen or small-screen use: in other words www.site.com and m.site.com will both need be conformant to WCAG 2.1 when invoking that 'clause', so where is the issue? (Q: do we make as a conformance condition that in a use-case like this, both"views" must meet the same conformance level? i.e. a "mobile" (sorry Patrick) site that claims conformance to WCAG 2.1 by, in part, relying on pointing to WCAG 2.0-only content, explicitly does NOT meet WCAG 2.1 conformance. Seems obvious, but should we document that somewhere?) JF On Wed, Jun 29, 2016 at 11:53 AM, Patrick H. Lauke <redux@splintered.co.uk> wrote: > On 29/06/2016 17:33, David MacDonald wrote: > >> So even if there are "more content", "additional interface elements" >>>> >>> etc in the alternate version, it counts as alternate version under the >> current definition/note 2. >> >> I'm not sure. That was my original assumption. However, it says multiple >> pages, it doesn't say "more complicated, bandwidth heavy, complicated >> menu, etc..." >> >> But I agree it is a concern worth addressing. I know I've been on the >> fence about failing messed up hamburger menus. I usually say "fixing it >> lowers the risk of complaint" >> > > Why? If a hamburger menu is messed up (its trigger doesn't expose the > correct role, aria-expanded, it doesn't handle focus correctly when > opened/closed, etc) then it fails WCAG. What's that got to do with this > discussion? > > Note 2: The alternate version does not need to be matched page for page >>> >> with the original (e.g., the conforming alternate version may consist of >> multiple pages). <add>However, it should not force the user to navigate >> to a view optimized for another platform.</add> >> > > At the risk of dragging this out even further, I don't think I agree with > this. Whether something is "optimized" or not does not mean it's accessible > or not. And again, if the alternative is accessible, it'll also be > implicitly "optimized" as far as WCAG 2.1 demands (once the other SCs are > in place). > > > 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 > > -- John Foliot Principal Accessibility Strategist Deque Systems Inc. john.foliot@deque.com Advancing the mission of digital accessibility and inclusion
Received on Wednesday, 29 June 2016 17:36:00 UTC