- From: Lachlan Hunt <lachlan.hunt@lachy.id.au>
- Date: Fri, 28 Aug 2009 12:27:08 +0200
- To: Steven Faulkner <faulkner.steve@gmail.com>
- Cc: HTML WG <public-html@w3.org>, W3C WAI-XTECH <wai-xtech@w3.org>
Steven Faulkner wrote: > hi lachlan, > It would be useful if these were defined in the HTML5 spec no? Yes, presumably in the section defining ARIA role mappings. See below. > my thinking would be that untill such times that the various elements and > associaated algorithms are implemented in user agents, use of landmarks to > mark up unsupported semantics be allowed. Yes, of course they would be allowed. I never suggested otherwise. > Lachlan Hunt wrote: >> Steven Faulkner wrote: >>> 2. there is no comparable element to role="banner" as <header> is >>> allowed to be used multiple times within a document and it >>> states in the ARIA spec that 'Within any document or application, >>> the author *SHOULD* mark no more than one element with the banner >>> role.' >> >> This could be defined to map to the first header element in the page who's >> nearest sectioning element ancestor is the body element. The current spec already maps <header> to the banner role, but the definition needs to be refined as described. >>> 3. while currently role="contentinfo" does not have an authoring >>> restriction like role="banner", i believe this is an oversight, >>> and it should have. If so there will be the same issue with >>> mapping it to <footer>, which can also be present multiple times >>> in a html5 document. >> >> If that restriction were to be applied to role="contentinfo", then it could >> similarly be defined to map to the first (or maybe last) footer element in >> the page who's nearest sectioning element ancestor is the body element. The spec also maps <footer> and <address> to the contentinfo role, but I don't think the spec needs to change anything here, at least until ARIA does restrict contentinfo to just one element, if they do as Steve suggested. -- Lachlan Hunt - Opera Software http://lachy.id.au/ http://www.opera.com/
Received on Friday, 28 August 2009 10:27:43 UTC