Re: Re: Re: Does text-overflow fail reflow and/or text-spacing

> The above quote seems relevant to editable and or actionable content but 
how would this same issue be handled when  considering content that is not 
actionable (for example, an informational table)?

If the content isn't actionable, then it's not really possible to have an 
affordance to expand the truncated text. Therefore, it's going to have to 
accommodate the text spacing requirements without truncation. So, in the 
example of the data table, it will need to be constructed in such a way 
that the cell size responds to or can accommodate text, where spacing is 
increased to the requirements of the SC.

Michael Gower
Senior Consultant in Accessibility
IBM Design


1803 Douglas Street, Victoria, BC  V8T 5C3
gowerm@ca.ibm.com
cellular: (250) 661-0098 *  fax: (250) 220-8034



From:   "Granquist, Christina M" <christina.granquist@usbank.com>
To:     Mitchell Evan <mtchllvn@gmail.com>, "Charles 'chaals' (McCathie) 
Nevile" <chaals@yandex.ru>
Cc:     WAI Interest Group <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
Date:   2019-07-08 08:35 AM
Subject:        [EXTERNAL] Re:  Re: Does text-overflow fail reflow and/or 
text-spacing



 
Understanding Success Criterion 1.4.4 Resize Text offers an answer which I 
agree with. The truncated content should offer a control which enables the 
full content. I'll quote the full paragraph here because it's very 
relevant. 

"Some user interface components that function as a label and require 
activation by the user to access content are not wide enough to 
accommodate the label's content. For example, in Web mail applications the 
subject column may not be wide enough to accommodate every possible 
subject header, but activating the subject header takes the user to the 
full message with the full subject header. In Web-based spreadsheets, cell 
content that is too long to be displayed in a column can be truncated, and 
the full content of the cell is available to the user when the cell 
receives focus. The content of a user interface component may also become 
too wide in user interfaces where the user can resize the column width. In 
this type of user interface component, line wrapping is not required; 
truncation is acceptable if the component's full content is available on 
focus or after user activation and an indication that this information can 
be accessed, is provided to the user in some way besides the fact that it 
is truncated."
 
 
-When considering this problem on mobile and in a non editable element, 
where content is still truncated.  How would this problem be handled, 
considering the smaller screen and also that mouse hover, to reveal the 
extended label would not be possible.  Additionally, having multiple show 
all buttons in a non editable table would clutter up the interface.  The 
above quote seems relevant to editable and or actionable content but how 
would this same issue be handled when  considering content that is not 
actionable (for example, an informational table)?
 
Best,
Christina
 
 
From: Mitchell Evan <mtchllvn@gmail.com>
Date: Saturday, July 6, 2019 at 12:37 AM
To: "Charles 'chaals' (McCathie) Nevile" <chaals@yandex.ru>
Cc: WAI Interest Group <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: Does text-overflow fail reflow and/or text-spacing
Resent-From: <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
Resent-Date: Saturday, July 6, 2019 at 12:32 AM
 
Understanding Success Criterion 1.4.4 Resize Text offers an answer which I 
agree with. The truncated content should offer a control which enables the 
full content. I'll quote the full paragraph here because it's very 
relevant. 

"Some user interface components that function as a label and require 
activation by the user to access content are not wide enough to 
accommodate the label's content. For example, in Web mail applications the 
subject column may not be wide enough to accommodate every possible 
subject header, but activating the subject header takes the user to the 
full message with the full subject header. In Web-based spreadsheets, cell 
content that is too long to be displayed in a column can be truncated, and 
the full content of the cell is available to the user when the cell 
receives focus. The content of a user interface component may also become 
too wide in user interfaces where the user can resize the column width. In 
this type of user interface component, line wrapping is not required; 
truncation is acceptable if the component's full content is available on 
focus or after user activation and an indication that this information can 
be accessed, is provided to the user in some way besides the fact that it 
is truncated."
 
On Fri, Jul 5, 2019 at 12:48 PM Charles 'chaals' (McCathie) Nevile <
chaals@yandex.ru> wrote:
On Fri, 05 Jul 2019 15:13:12 +0200, Joppe Kroon <J.Kroon@topdesk.com>
wrote:

> I am currently in the process of auditing our software and ran into some 
 
> elements where _more_ of the text will be truncated >when zooming or 
> changing text spacing.
>
> These elements display the first few words of (end-user provided) text 
> truncated to the available width using the CSS ‘text->overflow’ 
property.
>
> The reflow and text-spacing criteria mention that a user should be able 
> to zoom or increase text spacing without loss of >content, so, in a 
> strict interpretation, these elements would fail.
>
> When I’m in a lenient mood, I feel that the truncated text was already 
> not expected to be provided in it’s entirety, so the >additional loss of 
 
> content would be acceptable.
>
> Would you fail or accept this situation?

Generally I would fail it, unless the purpose is really to get a sense of
what happens without the text itself being legible. (My assumption is that
most of the time that is unlikely to bne part of the use case. In any
event, even when it is it is usually pretty frustrating).

That's a hard line to take, I think. It is a case I think can be argued 
reasonably easily against the written requirements, but I would prefer not 
 
to spend a lot of time on it since it seems that it is first based on a 
bad practice that should be fixed anyway, and second otherwise it is 
probably not a very impactful problem.

> Would it be worth adding this situation to the reflow/text-spacing 
> understanding documents?

Probably, if we can reach agreement on an answer...

cheers

Chaals

> Regards,
> Joppe Kroon

-- 
Using Opera's mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/


 
-- 
Mitchell Evan
mtchllvn@gmail.com
(510) 375-6104 mobile


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Received on Monday, 8 July 2019 16:21:20 UTC