Thanks, some things to try.
the office package and tags can be sent to .pdf with the
accessibility...
>>> "Jason Megginson" <jason@bartsite.com>
04/02/02 03:43PM >>>
Hello Steven,
I have done work with
Adobe .pdf accessibility and came across the same
problem. If you are using
Microsoft Office, an equation editor comes with
the office package and tags
can be sent to .pdf with the accessibility
plug-in....as you probably know.
I was dealing with the problem, where Microsoft tools weren't used to
convert to .pdf and the eqaution had exponents and sub variables. The
solution I implemented dealt with the use of the structure tree's element
properties. I changed the alternate text on elements (for example..."A sub
c" and so on.) to explain the variables and figures more thouroghly.
I would organize and name the structure tree elements among numerators
and
denominators and treat the division line as an artifact and give it
alternate text such as "divided by" or "division line". I fealt like this
was the best way to make an already created .pdf accessible with all of the
variables and mathematical figures.
Again, this solution is the best
solution I have found if the equation is
already made into a .pdf. I would
be interesed in any other techniques and
tools as well.
Hope this
helped.
J
-----Original Message-----
From:
w3c-wai-ig-request@w3.org [
mailto:w3c-wai-ig-request@w3.org]On
Behalf Of Steven McCaffrey
Sent: Tuesday, April 02, 2002 3:06 PM
To:
lguarino@Adobe.COM ;
Viral.Patel@exim.gov Cc:
w3c-wai-ig@w3.org Subject: Re:
Accesibility of PDF files & editing them
Hi Loretta and all:
I have a slightly off topic (specific topic of alt text/forms in PDF)
but it may be related. I was interested lately in reading PDF's that
contain equations. One example is
Richard Feynman's nobel lecture
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1965/feynman-lecture.pdf
The Adobe translation tools and accessibility plugin work well on the text
portion, but the equations, as one might guess, get a bit garbled.
I was
wondering if there might be a PDF to latex converter perhaps?
Might there be
other suggestions?
Thanks,
Steve
Steve McCaffrey
Senior Programmer/Analyst
ITS
NYSED
>>> Loretta
Guarino Reid <
lguarino@adobe.com > 04/02/02
12:23PM >>>
Have you looked at the document at
http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/pdfs/CreateAccessibleAdvanced.pdf
It describes a number of techniques for repairing accessibility problems
in
PDF files.
Loretta Guarino Reid