Re: Collections of web pages

Chuck,
That gets into the topic of “3rd party content”: https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG21/#conformance-partial


That is to say, such a site is still considered a set.

Thanks,
AWK

Andrew Kirkpatrick
Head of Accessibility
Adobe

akirkpat@adobe.com
http://twitter.com/awkawk


From: Charles Adams <charles.adams@oracle.com>
Date: Thursday, April 9, 2020 at 3:32 PM
To: WCAG <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>
Subject: Re: Collections of web pages
Resent-From: WCAG <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>
Resent-Date: Thursday, April 9, 2020 at 3:31 PM


Regarding the definition itself (not the examples), how do news aggregation sites or portal sites or search engines fit?  Most of the presented content will not have been created by a single author, group or organization.

Chuck
On 4/9/2020 10:50 AM, Alastair Campbell wrote:
Looking through, I think the ‘set of web pages’ definition is the best place to clarify on ePub, for example adding an example:

set of web pages

collection of web pages<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/www.w3.org/TR/WCAG21/*dfn-web-page-s__;Iw!!GqivPVa7Brio!N7bCWjfp2Nu2tPAFunGliWB0zJxvHzLJak41wuygPOJE5TDr-x5SbooIaPGdPGOvxw$> that share a common purpose and that are created by the same author, group or organization

Examples: A publication which is split across multiple Web pages…
Example: A publication which is made up of a set of web pages available at one URI in a linear order, such as an ePub document.

The last example being the addition. I put in the ‘linear order’ part to differentiate from the ‘rendered together’ part of the web page definition.

Again, I don’t think it is needed for the new SCs, but it might help with how ePubs are treated in WCAG in general.

Cheers,

-Alastair

Received on Thursday, 9 April 2020 19:45:23 UTC