- From: Henri Sivonen <hsivonen@iki.fi>
- Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2009 16:21:49 +0300
- To: Jan Richards <jan.richards@utoronto.ca>
- Cc: HTMLWG WG <public-html@w3.org>, W3C WAI-XTECH <wai-xtech@w3.org>
On Aug 20, 2009, at 15:06, Jan Richards wrote: > Henri Sivonen wrote: >> Given enough rope, Web authors do the wildest things for the >> craziest reasons. However, here's a plausible non-crazy failure >> scenario: >> Author A creates a document using an authoring tool and fails to >> make the document accessible. The authoring tool inserts the >> "ignore" marker. Later, author B in author A's organization >> addresses the problem that the document is inaccessible. Author B >> adds sensible alt text using a text editor. While author B has read >> introductions to Web accessibility to know about alt, author B >> isn't aware of the finer points of HTML syntax and fails to remove >> the "ignore" marker. Now the document is still inaccessible in UAs >> that honor the "ignore" marker. Author B could even test the >> document in older UAs without noticing the problem. > > I see. Perhaps this could be addressed somewhat by advising > authoring tools to automatically undo the "missing" mechanism if an > author edits the @alt value. That author B uses a text editor and not an HTML-aware authoring tool is a key part of the scenario. I think it's a realistic key part. The way to mitigate this is to make only validators and authoring tools sensitive to the "missing" marker and not to make browsers/AT sensitive to it at all. -- Henri Sivonen hsivonen@iki.fi http://hsivonen.iki.fi/
Received on Thursday, 20 August 2009 13:22:32 UTC