Re: Breadcrumbs trail versus Back button

Mostly that is a design and usability decision. 

Some sites lend themselves to breadcrumbs - others are more spider web like and do not. 

Links and search are two navigation methods talked about during the SC creation.  Also site maps - navigation bars - tabs.    

NOT having a back button usually is disorienting but there is not a requirement  for one - and they are not always possible  (e.g. after button to complete a sale — or delete all files.  A regret process might be provided but a back button would not take you back to status before pressing button). 

Is that helpful? 

gregg

———————————
Professor, University of Maryland, College Park
Director , Trace R&D Center, UMD
Co-Founder Raising the Floor. http://raisingthefloor.org
And the Global Public Inclusive Infrastructure (GPII) http://GPII.net




> On Jul 22, 2020, at 9:17 PM, Charissa Ramirez <MariaCharissa.Ramirez@customerservice.nsw.gov.au> wrote:
> 
> Hi everyone
>  
> I like to ask about the importance of the breadcrumb trail, which our site currently have.
>  
> We are testing a layout from a stakeholder where we will remove the breadcrumb trail, and instead, the user navigates back using the back button.
>  
> What are the accessibility implications of such step?
>  
> Part of the reply that I have prepared in regards to this issue is the following:
>  
> I have referenced this to three WCAG SC, namely:
> SC 2.4.5: Multiple ways – Level AA) Users must have multiple ways to navigate to a page.
> (SC 3.2.3: Consistent Navigation – Level AA) Consistent navigation.
> (SC 2.4.8 Location – Level AAA) Provide a way for the user to orient themselves within a web site.
>  
> I’d like to hear your thoughts and recommendations.
> Are the three SCs applicable in this case?
>  
> Thanks.
>  
> Kind regards
>  
> Charissa
> UX Team/Accessibility Specialist
> NSW Gov Digital Channels team
>  
>  
>  
> 
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Received on Thursday, 23 July 2020 12:41:15 UTC