actually, Steve's comment raises a question.
I recall last week a post about early reviews of WCAG 3.
May I ask what evaluation method the w3c uses to confirm that enough
compliance with current wcAG criteria exists before starting a updated
set?
Speaking personally, should not a uniform baseline for end users exists
before companies and organizations find themselves faced with changes?
Just wondering,
Karen
On Tue, 21 May 2024, Steve Green wrote:
> Note that that GDS page was created early in 2018, so it predates both WCAG 2.1 and 2.2. Another 18 level A and AA success criteria have been added since then.
>
> Steve Green
> Managing Director
> Test Partners Ltd
>
>
> From: Kevin White <kevin@dewoollery.co.uk>
> Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2024 5:16 PM
> To: Phill Jenkins <pjenkins@us.ibm.com>
> Cc: WAI Interest Group discussion list <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>; Shawn Henry <shawn@w3.org>
> Subject: Re: Website with known set of issues
>
> Hi Phill,
>
> Not sure if it would meet your needs but GDS did testing of accessibility tools on a standard set of failures<https://alphagov.github.io/accessibility-tool-audit/test-cases.html> that they presented in a single page. The association with success criteria is clear but not explicitly linked.
>
> Thanks
>
> Kevin
>
> P.s. Would love to update Before/After demo!
>
>
> On 21 May 2024, at 16:40, Phill Jenkins <pjenkins@us.ibm.com<mailto:pjenkins@us.ibm.com>> wrote:
>
> Is there a website (or set) with a known set of issues mapped to all the WCAG 2.2 Success Criteria?
>
> In other words, “this set of pages demonstrates failures for all the WCAG Success Criteria”.
>
> There is that decades old Before After demo website<https://www.w3.org/WAI/demos/bad/Overview.html> created by W3C that was an initial attempt to do something like that. However, it is woefully out of date.
> I’ve head that there may be some web pages maintained by a university or organization for spot testing or spot demos, but a curated list would be very helpful for the community.
>
> _______
> Regards,
>
> Phill Jenkins
> IBM Accessibility, IBM Design
> Equal Access toolkit and accessibility checker at ibm.com/able/<https://www.ibm.com/able/>
> “Without accessibility, there is no diversity, equity, or inclusion for disabled people”
>
>